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Home/ Questions/Q 9117953
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 17, 20262026-06-17T05:01:19+00:00 2026-06-17T05:01:19+00:00

class Foo { public static $my_static = ‘foo’; public static function staticValue() { return

  • 0
class Foo
{
    public static $my_static = 'foo';

    public static function staticValue() {
        return self::$my_static;
    }
}


$foo = new Foo();
print $foo->staticValue() . "\n";
print $foo->my_static . "\n"; 

Why the static attribute is not accessible while static resources are accessible using object in PHP.It is only accessible using ‘::’.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-17T05:01:20+00:00Added an answer on June 17, 2026 at 5:01 am

    Because you have 2 “scopes” one is the “object” and one is the “static” within every class.
    So the same problem occurs of you want to execute a normal method within a static method.
    For example:

    class foo {
     public function bar() {
      echo "bar";
     } 
    
     public static function bar2() {
       echo $this->bar();
     }
    }
    
    $foo = new foo();
    $foo->bar2();
    

    That is because the you are in a static context and the object context is not accessable from there.
    I think, more it can not be said about this.
    See it like you have a house with 2 familys which lives in it and the doors between them can NEVER be open.
    You have one global house which is the class and then family 1 which is the object scope and finally family 2 which is the static scope.

    Maybe this helped.

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