you can omit those methods if they dont do anything else except for calling 
the parent
the cookbook merely offers examples on how you would do it if you needed it

so yes, from an oop point of view, pretty useless


Am Dienstag, 11. Dezember 2012 22:02:46 UTC+1 schrieb alaxos:
>
> While answering a recent question on stackoverflow (http:// 
> stackoverflow.com/questions/13825073/always-call-a-function-in- 
> cakephp), I discovered that it seems to be recommended in the cookbook 
> to always override the AppController beforeFilter() in child 
> controllers (http://book.cakephp.org/2.0/en/controllers.html#the-app- 
> controller), even if it is only to call the AppController's 
> beforeFilter() method like this: 
>
> public function beforeFilter() { 
>     parent::beforeFilter(); 
> } 
>
> My feeling is that in OO programming, this is useless, because if we 
> don't override a method in a child class, the parent method is used. 
>
> I do know that when the beforeFilter() method is not overridden in 
> child controllers, the AppController's beforeFilter() is indeed 
> called, but as it is recommended in the cookbook, is there any 
> advantage to do so ? Am I missing something here ? 
>

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