Hi all. Am fixing some inherited code, and the previous coder created a 
class, ie:

class myClass {
        function &doThis($passedVar) {
                doSomething;
        }

        function &doThat($anotherVar) {
                doSomethingElse;
        }
}

BUT, I don't see anywhere where he created an object, ie:

$myObject = new myClass();

or

$myObject = myClass::doThis("value");

        Instead, it's only ever just called directly with a "Scope Resolution 
Operator", ie:

myClass::doThis("valueOne");
myClass::doThat($whatever);
myClass::doThis("valueTwo");
myClass::doThat($andSoOn);

        It seems that this would be making an object, and then destroying it 
again, on each of the four calls above, which I would think would be wasteful - 
time, memory, cpu usage, etc.
        The class has no constants or variables (properties) for any need for 
persistence, and is just a collection of functions (methods), so I don't see a 
reason to group them into a class - they could all reside as independent 
functions within the php file.
        Is this good? Is there some advantage to making a non-persistent class?
        Thanks!


George Langley    Multimedia Developer    Audio/Video Editor    Musician, 
Arranger, Composer

Reply via email to