PHP does not have method overloading as with other languages. The only option is to use optional arguments.
This is a better testing scenario as described in the other post:
<?php
class Test
{
function Test($name = "stranger")
{
echo "Hello, $name";
}
}
$t1=new Test(); // Output : Hello, stranger
$t2=new Test('Osman Kalache'); // Output : Hello, Osman Kalache
?>
overload
(PHP 4 >= 4.3.0)
overload — Habilita sobrecarga de propriedade e método para uma classe
Descrição
void overload
( string $class_name
)
A função overload() habilitará chamada sobrecarregando propriedade e método para uma classe identificada por class_name.
Parâmetros
- class_name
-
O nome da classe a ser sobrecarregada, como uma string
Valor Retornado
Não há valor retornado.
Exemplos
Veja um exemplo na seção introdutória.
User Contributed Notes
overload
overload
admin at skewedconcepts dot ca
06-Apr-2012 07:07
06-Apr-2012 07:07
osminosm at gmail dot com
22-Jan-2009 05:22
22-Jan-2009 05:22
creating two methods with the same name won't work for sure (maybe in next versions i hope)
but for now all i could come up with something that looks like overloaded functions from the outside but still makes it a bit difficult for the one who's coding the actual class
as we can see in the code bellow i've used a default value for the $name argument, so when the Test() method is called with no arguments the $name argument is by default passed as NULL (or any value you wanna pass)
<?php
class Test
{
function Test($name=NULL)
{
echo 'Hello, ';
if($name)
{
echo $name.'<br>';
}
else
{
echo 'stranger<br>';
}
}
}
$t1=new Test(); // Output : Hello, stranger
$t2=new Test('Osman Kalache'); // Output : Hello, Osman Kalache
?>
the bad side of this trick is that you have to test your arguments (imagine how many IFs and ELSEs you get if you had just 5 arguments)
but still makes your classes easy to use.

Funções para sobrecarga de Objeto