Quoting Yui Hiroaki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:

Please look at my.php

my.php load
$obj=new My("Hello");
$obj->buff();

so, if a.php load, it absolutely got "hello" in load b.php

Regards,
Yui

2008/6/3 Thijs Lensselink <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
Quoting Yui Hiroaki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:

Thank you for a good suggest!

Somehow, I have to execute my.php also.
This program have to run.
1)My.php
2)b.php

My.php show "Hello" -> it is OK,
b.php shows
 "Hello"
"Good"

it is NOT good. I need to get only "Good"


Please give me a suggestion.

Regards,
Yui
2008/6/3 James Dempster <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:

I suggest you don't put code other than class structures in class files.
Also don't execute My.php just execute b.php which though __autoload
includes My.php.

-----------------b.php----------------
<?php
function __autoload($class_name) {
 include_once $class_name . '.php';
}

$obj=new My("Hello");
$obj->buff();

$objref=new My("Good");
$objref->buff();

-----------------------------------

----------My.php--------------
<?php

Class My{
      private $word;
      function __construct($getword){
      $this->word=$getword;
      }
      public function buff(){
      echo $this->word."<br />";
      }
}


/James Dempster

On Tue, Jun 3, 2008 at 9:17 AM, Yui Hiroaki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

HI!

I had mistake in code in php.

When I excute My.php, it say "Hello"
When I excute b.php, it say
Hello
Good

I would like to execute b.php and show
only "Good"

If you know it ,please teach me!

Here is code below;

-----------------b.php----------------
<?php
function __autoload($class_name) {
 include_once $class_name . '.php';
}


$objref=new My("Good");
$objref->buff();
?>
-----------------------------------

----------My.php--------------
<?php
$obj=new My("Hello");
$obj->buff();


Class My{
      private $word;
      function __construct($getword){
      $this->word=$getword;
      }
      public function buff(){
      echo $this->word."<br />";
      }
}
?>
--------------------------------------
Regards,
Yui


2008/6/3 James Dempster <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> I don't see how it's possible for you to get "Hello" after "Good",
> when
> the
> file that cause's "Hello" is required to do "Good"
>
> /James
>
> On Mon, Jun 2, 2008 at 2:00 PM, Yui Hiroaki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
>>
>> Please take a look at code.
>>
>> --------a.php--------
>>
>> $obj=new my("Hello");
>> $obj->buff();
>>
>>
>> Class my{
>>
>> private $word;
>> function __construct($getword){
>>       $this->word=$getword;
>> }
>> public function buff(){
>>     echo $this->word."<br />";
>> }
>> --------------------------------------
>>
>>
>> -----b.php-----------------------
>>
>> function __autoload($class_name) {
>>    include_once $class_name . '.php';
>> }
>>
>>
>> $objref=new my("Good");
>> $objref->buff();
>> --------------------------------------------
>>
>>
>>
>> I get an Echo;
>>
>> Good
>> Hello
>> Hello
>>
>> I do not need to get Hello twice.
>>
>> When I b.php , $obj=new my("Hello") is loaded.
>>
>>
>> Do you have any adia to avoid load $obj in a.php twice?
>>
>> Regards,
>> Yui
>>
>> --
>> PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/)
>> To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
>>
>
>



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If you only want to see "Good" Then don't run it twice.
Take James's suggestion and try it again:

-----------------b.php----------------
<?php
function __autoload($class_name) {
  include_once $class_name . '.php';
}

$objref=new My("Good");
$objref->buff();

-----------------------------------

----------My.php--------------
<?php

Class My{
       private $word;
       function __construct($getword){
       $this->word=$getword;
       }
       public function buff(){
       echo $this->word."<br />";
       }
}



I don't think i understand you fully. Or you're trying to make it to complicated.

You have a class in "My.php" :

Class My{
    private $word;

    function __construct($getword){
        $this->word=$getword;
    }

    public function buff(){
        echo $this->word."<br />";
    }
}

And a script that creates an instance of My "b.php" :

function __autoload($class_name) {
  include_once $class_name . '.php';
}

$obj=new My("Hello");
$obj->buff();

$objref=new My("Good");
$objref->buff();

The output will be "Hello<br/>Good<br/>". because you call it two times. So if you only want to see "Good". Then you change "b.php" to look like this:

function __autoload($class_name) {
  include_once $class_name . '.php';
}

$objref=new My("Good");
$objref->buff();

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