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Home/ Questions/Q 4609270
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 22, 20262026-05-22T00:57:47+00:00 2026-05-22T00:57:47+00:00

Let’s start off with some code: class Super { protected static $color; public static

  • 0

Let’s start off with some code:

class Super {

    protected static $color;

    public static function setColor($color){
        self::$color = $color;
    }

    public static function getColor() {
        return self::$color;
    }

}

class ChildA extends Super { }

class ChildB extends Super { }

ChildA::setColor('red');
ChildB::setColor('green');

echo ChildA::getColor();
echo ChildB::getColor();

Now, late static binding in PHP 5.3 using the static keyword works great with static methods, so I assumed it would do the same magic on static variables. Well, seems it doesn’t. The example above does not print out “red” and then “green” as I first expected, but “green” and “green”. Why doesn’t this work on variables when it works on methods? Is there any other way to achieve the effect I expected?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-22T00:57:47+00:00Added an answer on May 22, 2026 at 12:57 am

    Late static binding will only work for new definitions of variables / methods. Thus, in your example, the $color property of Super will always be modified instead of ChildA or ChildB. To make use of late static binding, you need to use the static keyword instead of self. Furthermore, you need to redefine the $color property of your ChildA and ChildB classes:

    class Super {
    
        protected static $color;
    
        public static function setColor($color){
            // static instead of self
            static::$color = $color;
        }
    
        public static function getColor() {
            // static instead of self
            return static::$color;
        }
    
    }
    
    class ChildA extends Super {
        protected static $color;
    }
    class ChildB extends Super {
        protected static $color;
    }
    
    ChildA::setColor('red');
    ChildB::setColor('green');
    
    echo Super::getColor(); // prints nothing (NULL = ''), expected
    echo ChildA::getColor();// prints red
    echo ChildB::getColor();// prints green
    
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