������!
> if you have multilayered inheritance you may explicitely say which
> anceStor class you are calling, like foo::print().
two typos in a few words are definitely too much, sorry :)
BTW, although almost all class specification is dynamic you cannot
dynamically specify a class name in fron of the :: operator. A bug, most
probably.
$myclass = 'foo';
$myclass::print();
will produce a weird parse error.
����
��������
����
@-_=}{=_-@-_=}{=_-@-_=}{=_-@-_=}{=_-@-_=}{=_-@-_=}{=_-@-_=}{=_-@
LoRd, CaN yOu HeAr Me, LiKe I'm HeArInG yOu?
lOrD i'M sHiNiNg...
YoU kNoW I AlMoSt LoSt My MiNd, BuT nOw I'm HoMe AnD fReE
tHe TeSt, YeS iT iS
ThE tEsT, yEs It Is
tHe TeSt, YeS iT iS
ThE tEsT, yEs It Is.......
--
PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/)
To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php