When extending a class from another namespace that should instantiate a class from within the current namespace, you need to pass on the namespace.
<?php // File1.php
namespace foo;
class A {
    public function factory() {
        return new C;
    }
}
class C {
    public function tell() {
        echo "foo";
    }
}
?>
<?php // File2.php
namespace bar;
class B extends \foo\A {}
class C {
    public function tell() {
        echo "bar";
    }
}
?>
<?php
include "File1.php";
include "File2.php";
$b = new bar\B;
$c = $b->factory();
$c->tell(); // "foo" but you want "bar"
?>
You need to do it like this:
When extending a class from another namespace that should instantiate a class from within the current namespace, you need to pass on the namespace.
<?php // File1.php
namespace foo;
class A {
    protected $namespace = __NAMESPACE__;
    public function factory() {
        $c = $this->namespace . '\C';
        return new $c;
    }
}
class C {
    public function tell() {
        echo "foo";
    }
}
?>
<?php // File2.php
namespace bar;
class B extends \foo\A {
    protected $namespace = __NAMESPACE__;
}
class C {
    public function tell() {
        echo "bar";
    }
}
?>
<?php
include "File1.php";
include "File2.php";
$b = new bar\B;
$c = $b->factory();
$c->tell(); // "bar"
?>
(it seems that the namespace-backslashes are stripped from the source code in the preview, maybe it works in the main view. If not: fooA was written as \foo\A and barB as bar\B)



 
			 
                 add a note
 add a note