On Thu, 20 Jan 2005 16:39:21 +0100
"M. Sokolewicz" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> Sergio Gorelyshev wrote:
> > Hi all.
> > 
> > Situation:
> > 
> > interface MyInterface {
> >  public static myMethod();
> > }
> > 
> > class MyClass implements MyInterface {
> >   public static myMethod() {}
> > }
> > 
> > This sample will crash with message 
> > Fatal error: Access type for interface method MyInterface::myMethod() must 
> > be omitted in somefile.php on line NN
> > 
> > Why I'm not able to clarify call's type (static) for methods in interface? 
> > I'm predict closely that method myMethod() in all classes which implements  
> > MyInterface must be called statically. A little trick allowed to me to 
> > resolve this problem, but my question  more ideological than practical.
> > 
> > Thanks
> it's not the static part, it's the public part. You can't make 
> non-public static methods. It's simply impossible by the definition of 
> protected and private (both allow only the object itself to access it, 
> or (in case of protected) a descendent).
> 
> So, removing the public part should work out fine.
> 
I'm confused. Construction like that:
<?php
interface MyInterface {
  public static function myMethod();
}

class MyClass implements MyInterface {
   public static function myMethod() {}
}

MyClass::myMethod();
?>
fork fine when i'm fetched it from my framework. But it's crashes inside 
framework with previous message.

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-- 
RE5PECT
Sergio Gorelyshev

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