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Posted by C Drozdowski on 04/05/05 03:16
Howdy,
I'd like to access some of the private members of my classes as
read-only properties without resorting to function calls to access
them. (e.g. $testClass->privateMember instead of
$testClass->privateMember(), etc)
Based on my research and testing, using the __get and __set overloading
methods appears to be the only way to do so. It also, based on testing,
appears that these private members must be in an array.
What I do not understand is that if I declare a __get method I MUST
also declare a "do nothing" __set method to prevent the read-only
properties from being modified in code that uses the class.
For example, the code below allows me to have read-only properties.
However, if I remove the "do nothing" __set method completely, then the
properties are no longer read-only.
I'm curious as to why I HAVE to implement the __set method?
Example:
<?php
class testClass
{
private $varArray = array('one'=>'ONE', 'two'=>'TWO');
public function __get($name)
{
if (array_key_exists($name, $this->varArray)) {
return $this->varArray[$name];
}
}
public function __set($name, $value)
{
}
}
$test = new testClass();
$test->one = 'TWO'; // doesn't work
echo $test->one; // echo s 'ONE'
?>
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