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[2008-04-27 21:22 UTC] nicolas dot grekas+php at gmail dot com
Description:
------------
Hard to explain, see code... I think that PHP should be able to handle this kind of loading scheme.
Here is what I thought this code would do :
1. __autoload('A') is called
2. inside this call for A:
2.1 class B is defined, which extends C
2.2 as C is not defined, __autoload('C') is called
2.3 inside this call for C:
2.3.1 class C is defined
2.3.2 (now we have everything needed for class B, haven't we ?)
2.3.3 class A extends B
2.4 we leave the __autoload('C') context
3. we leave the __autoload('A') context
The bug is at step 2.3.3 : "class A extends B" triggers an autoload('B'), which should not occurs, as B should be already defined, thanks to 2.3.2...
Reproduce code:
---------------
<?php
function __autoload($class)
{
switch ($class)
{
case 'A':
case 'B':
class B extends C {};
break;
case 'C':
class C {};
class A extends B {};
break;
}
}
echo (int) class_exists('A');
Expected result:
----------------
1
Actual result:
--------------
Fatal error: Cannot redeclare class B in [...] on line 9
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Last updated: Sat Oct 25 07:00:02 2025 UTC |
I tried creating a work-around for this. However, this didn't work: So class B is half-existent ? You can not define it, but it also doesn't exists... <?php function __autoload($class) { switch ($class) { case 'A': case 'B': if(class_exists('B', false)) return; class B extends C {}; break; case 'C': class C {}; class A extends B {}; break; } } echo (int) class_exists('A'); ?>