...Just forgot to CC...
you can use any function name as method name without a clash. you just
cannot use language constructs that aren't real functions like
"empty", "echo" or "require" as method names.
this question better belongs to php-general, btw.
Sorry if I didn't made myself clear enough. I'm talking about C-extensions.
I've tried to implement the PHP_METHOD(class, xyz). It compiles fine, but
in runtime "PHP Warning: cannot redeclare xyz..." will appaer.
Daniel
On Wed, 13 Sep 2006 11:35:16 +0200
danhen@email.de wrote:
...Just forgot to CC...
you can use any function name as method name without a clash. you
just cannot use language constructs that aren't real functions like
"empty", "echo" or "require" as method names.this question better belongs to php-general, btw.
Sorry if I didn't made myself clear enough. I'm talking about
C-extensions. I've tried to implement the PHP_METHOD(class, xyz). It
compiles fine, but in runtime "PHP Warning: cannot redeclare xyz..."
will appaer.
It is possible to name a method like an existing function, I'm not sure
what you are doing exactly but it works here.
When your class is called zip and you have a function called zip_open,
it will conflict with the function name when you build against php <
5.2.0. It is fixed in 5.2 and a work around exists, see ext/zip for an
example.
-- Pierre