Inheritance is a well-established programming principle, and PHP makes use of this principle in its object model. This principle will affect the way many classes and objects relate to one another.

For example, when you extend a class, the subclass inherits all of the public and protected methods from the parent class. Unless a class overrides those methods, they will retain their original functionality.

This is useful for defining and abstracting functionality, and permits the implementation of additional functionality in similar objects without the need to reimplement all of the shared functionality.

Example

<?php

class Foo
{
public function printItem($string)
{
echo ‘Foo: ‘ . $string . PHP_EOL;
}

public function printPHP()
{
echo ‘PHP is great.’ . PHP_EOL;
}
}

class Bar extends Foo
{
public function printItem($string)
{
echo ‘Bar: ‘ . $string . PHP_EOL;
}
}

$foo = new Foo();
$bar = new Bar();
$foo->printItem(‘baz’); // Output: ‘Foo: baz’
$foo->printPHP();       // Output: ‘PHP is great’
$bar->printItem(‘baz’); // Output: ‘Bar: baz’
$bar->printPHP();       // Output: ‘PHP is great’

?>