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Home/ Questions/Q 884169
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T12:42:40+00:00 2026-05-15T12:42:40+00:00

I maintain an application that uses a (to me) surprising PHP quirk/bug/feature. Consider this

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I maintain an application that uses a (to me) surprising PHP quirk/bug/feature. Consider this code:

<?php
class Bar {
    // called statically
    public function doStuff() {
        print_r($this);
    }
}

class Foo {
    public function main() {
        Bar::doStuff();
    }
}

$foo = new Foo();
$foo->main();

Running on PHP 5.2.x, the output is:

Foo Object ( ) 

That means, although Bar::doStuff() is called statically, it still has access to $this where $this is a reference to the object that called Bar::doStuff(). Never came across that behaviour until recently. Quite evil to rely on this in production code if you ask me.

If you add a static and change the method signature to public static function doStuff() it throws a E_NOTICE: Undefined variable: this – which seems right to me.

Anyone has an explanation for this behaviour?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T12:42:41+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 12:42 pm

    In PHP 5.3 at least, you get a strict warning:

    PHP Strict Standards: Non-static method Bar::doStuff() should not be called statically, assuming $this from incompatible context in /tmp/test.php on line 11

    And quite rightfully so.

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