Final Keyword
suggest changeDef: Final Keyword prevents child classes from overriding a method by prefixing the definition with final. If the class itself is being defined final then it cannot be extended
Final Method
class BaseClass {
public function test() {
echo "BaseClass::test() called\n";
}
final public function moreTesting() {
echo "BaseClass::moreTesting() called\n";
}
}
class ChildClass extends BaseClass {
public function moreTesting() {
echo "ChildClass::moreTesting() called\n";
}
}
// Results in Fatal error: Cannot override final method BaseClass::moreTesting()
Final Class:
final class BaseClass {
public function test() {
echo "BaseClass::test() called\n";
}
// Here it doesn't matter if you specify the function as final or not
final public function moreTesting() {
echo "BaseClass::moreTesting() called\n";
}
}
class ChildClass extends BaseClass {
}
// Results in Fatal error: Class ChildClass may not inherit from final class (BaseClass)
Final constants: Unlike Java, the final
keyword is not used for class constants in PHP. Use the keyword const
instead.
Why do I have to use final
?
- Preventing massive inheritance chain of doom
- Encouraging composition
- Force the developer to think about user public API
- Force the developer to shrink an object’s public API
- A
final
class can always be made extensible extends
breaks encapsulation- You don’t need that flexibility
- You are free to change the code
When to avoid final
: Final classes only work effectively under following assumptions:
- There is an abstraction (interface) that the final class implements
- All of the public API of the final class is part of that interface
Found a mistake? Have a question or improvement idea?
Let me know.
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