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Home/ Questions/Q 646159
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T21:34:53+00:00 2026-05-13T21:34:53+00:00

I’ve never seen code like this: public static function getInstance() { if ( !

  • 0

I’ve never seen code like this:

public static function getInstance()
{
    if ( ! isset(self::$_instance)) {
        self::$_instance = new self();
    }
    return self::$_instance;
}

Is it the same as new className() ?

EDIT

If the class is inheritant,which class does it point to?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T21:34:53+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 9:34 pm

    self points to the class in which it is written.

    So, if your getInstance method is in a class name MyClass, the following line :

    self::$_instance = new self();
    

    Will do the same as :

    self::$_instance = new MyClass();
    


    Edit : a bit more information, after the comments.

    If you have two classes that extend each other, you have two situations :

    • getInstance is defined in the child class
    • getInstance is defined in the parent class

    The first situation would look like this (I’ve removed all non-necessary code, for this example — you’ll have to add it back to get the singleton behavior)* :

    class MyParentClass {
        
    }
    class MyChildClass extends MyParentClass {
        public static function getInstance() {
            return new self();
        }
    }
    
    $a = MyChildClass::getInstance();
    var_dump($a);
    

    Here, you’ll get :

    object(MyChildClass)#1 (0) { } 
    

    Which means self means MyChildClass — i.e. the class in which it is written.

    For the second situation, the code would look like this :

    class MyParentClass {
        public static function getInstance() {
            return new self();
        }
    }
    class MyChildClass extends MyParentClass {
        
    }
    
    $a = MyChildClass::getInstance();
    var_dump($a);
    

    And you’d get this kind of output :

    object(MyParentClass)#1 (0) { }
    

    Which means self means MyParentClass — i.e. here too, the class in which it is written.


    With PHP That’s why PHP 5.3 introduces a new usage for the static keyword : it can now be used exactly where we used self in those examples :

    class MyParentClass {
        public static function getInstance() {
            return new static();
        }
    }
    class MyChildClass extends MyParentClass {
        
    }
    
    $a = MyChildClass::getInstance();
    var_dump($a);
    

    But, with static instead of self, you’ll now get :

    object(MyChildClass)#1 (0) { } 
    

    Which means that static sort of points to the class that is used (we used MyChildClass::getInstance()), and not the one in which it is written.

    Of course, the behavior of self has not been changed, to not break existing applications — PHP 5.3 just added a new behavior, recycling the static keyword.

    And, speaking about PHP 5.3, you might want to take a look at the [Late Static Bindings][1] page of the PHP manual.

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