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Q: PHP: $this is not available in non object context in included PHP file

Mr. JoI have a class with the following structure: /** * @property int ticket_id */ class Test { public function __construct( $ticket_id ) { $this->ticket_id = $ticket_id; $this->register(); } /** * Register all hooks */ public function register(): void { ...

@treyBake In my constructor.
You have to create an object, and then reference its name. For example: $test = new Test(123); $test->ticket_id.
@BenM Yes, this is what I'm doing. The problem is inside my test.php file which is another file, not the class!
can you show your test.php please?
Where is the code for your test.php file?
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@BenM The content of the ping.php file: error_log($this-> ticket_id);
Is that all that's in your test.php file?
Yes sir, thats all. I'm just trying to read the value set in the constructur.
I see the problem. require_once != file_get_contents. It will not parse and include the text.
Where/how are you calling the ping() function?
The included file is parsed by PHP before being "imported" and as it's not in a class context until it's imported, when it's read, the $this is out of place. Read this
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@Cid this seems to be no solution for my problem. The problem is like Martin said the require_once so I need to find a solution for my require_once problem.
@Mr.Jo Well, the solution is to put the actual code of the function within the function itself. Why do you have a separate file for that one line of code?
@Cid the createProperty method seems more like my cup o' tea :) interesting read though! Will remove my comments ^.^
@PatrickQ Because it's going to be a very long file when I'm done with coding. I'm just setting everything up right now.
@Mr.Jo That means you need to be further splitting up your logic into additional functions. Perhaps even new classes. In the latter case, you'd just instantiate those new objects within your ping() function and call their functions as needed. So perhaps you need a Ping class.
@PatrickQ Hm, thats an idea. The plan was to create a class that handles all my AJAX requests. The code for each request should be inside a new file to prevent a huge class.
@PatrickQ Hm, thats an idea. The plan was to create a class that handles all my AJAX requests. The code for each request should be inside a new file to prevent a huge class.
@PatrickQ Hm, thats an idea. The plan was to create a class that handles all my AJAX requests. The code for each request should be inside a new file to prevent a huge class.
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@Mr.Jo Each class should only contain closely-related functions. A class often represents a specific entity. You should take a look at MVC architecture.
@PatrickQ So should I create 30 Classes for 30 AJAX functions?
@Mr.Jo Depends on what those functions are/do. If you have 5 distinct entities, each with 6 actions that can be taken on them, then you might have 5 controllers (which are classes) and 5 models (also classes) with 6 functions in them, for 10 classes. But it really just depends on what you're doing. A decent-sized project can easily have over 100 classes. Like I said, do some research on MVC. Also inheritance and objects in general.

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