I’m new to the OOP paradigm, so there’s probably a simple explanation for this question…
Do you always need to declare public object-wide variables in a class? For example:
<?php
class TestClass
{
var $declaredVar;
function __construct()
{
$this->declaredVar = "I am a declared variable.";
$this->undeclaredVar = "I wasn't declared, but I still work.";
}
function display()
{
echo $this->declaredVar . "<br />";
echo $this->undeclaredVar;
echo "<br /><br />";
}
}
$test = new TestClass;
$test->display();
$test->declaredVar = "The declared variable was changed.";
$test->undeclaredVar = "The undeclared variable was changed.";
$test->display();
?>
In this code, even though $declaredVar is the only declared variable, $undeclaredVar is just as accessible and useable–it seems to act as if I had declared it as public.
If undeclared class variables are always accessible like that, what’s the point of declaring them all up front?
That variable isn’t uninitialized, it’s just undeclared.
Declaring variables in a class definition is a point of style for readability.
Plus you can set accessibility (private or public).
Anyway, declaring variables explicitly has nothing to do with OOP, it’s programming-language-specific. In Java you can’t do that because variables must be declared explicitly.