It is supposed to behave like this.
We took the C++ model.
Andi
At 12:13 PM 5/22/2001 +0200, Ulf Wendel wrote:
>Hi,
>
>I stepped into something yesterday I would call an undocumented feature
>or a bug, don't know if I should make a bug report. Here's the snippet:
>
>function bar() {
> static $j = 0;
> print ++$j;
>}
>
>class foo {
>
> function foo() {
> static $i = 0;
> print ++$i;
> }
>
> function bar() {
> static $j = 0;
> print ++$j;
> }
>
>}
>
>$obj1 = new foo(); => prints 1
>$obj2 = new foo(); => prints 2
>
>$obj1->bar(); => prints 1
>$obj2->bar(); => prints 2
>
>bar(); => prints 1
>
>
>Looks like the static variable is not bound to the member functions of
>my objects. I expected that member functions from different objects of
>the same type do not share static variables, so that the output would be
>"11111".
>
>Ulf
>
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