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[2001-01-16 12:51 UTC] florian dot ortner at nme dot at
the following code-snippet illustrated the problem:
-----
class a
{
var $bla; // some intvalue
var $b; // object of type b
function a($i) {
$this->bla = $i;
// the next line ain't working in the constructor
//$this->b = new b($this);
}
function x() {
// the next line behaves like expected
$this->b = new b($this);
}
function p() {
echo "a::p ".$this->bla."<br>";
}
}
class b
{
var $a; // reference to object of type a
function b(&$a) {
$this->a = &$a;
}
function p() {
echo "b::p ".$this->a->bla."<br>";
}
}
$a = new a(10);
$a->x(); // works
$a->p();
$a->b->p();
$a->bla = 11;
$a->p();
$a->b->p();
-----
output:
a::p 10
b::p 10
a::p 11
b::p 11
-----
this is the wanted behaviour. var $a->b contains a object of type b which contains a reference back to object $a. object b is instanciated and assigned via the $a->x() methodcall. so far, nothing special.
when i want to get rid of the additional method in a (that's the x() method) and instanciate b inside of a's constructor and assign it to $a->b with $this, $a->b->a doesnt contain a reference to the calling a object but a copy of it.
thus, $this isn't really working inside of an object's constructor.
afaik do other languages have the same limitation of using $this inside of the constructor due to address-calculation issues.
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Last updated: Wed Nov 05 20:00:01 2025 UTC |
just in case, if i change a's constructor to function a($i) { $this->bla = $i; $this->b = new b(&$this); // note the & } it doesn't work either.