Object-Oriented PHP: Classes, Objects, Inheritance, Interfaces, Traits, and Namespaces
Build the object-oriented foundation needed for modern PHP frameworks and maintainable application design.
Inside this chapter
- Why OOP Matters in PHP
- Classes and Objects
- Inheritance and Interfaces
- Traits and Namespaces
- Real Example
Series navigation
Study the chapters in order for the clearest path from PHP basics to backend architecture, security, deployment, and production engineering habits. Use the navigation at the bottom to move smoothly through the full tutorial series.
Why OOP Matters in PHP
While small PHP scripts can be procedural, most modern PHP applications use object-oriented patterns for structure and maintainability. Frameworks, libraries, and domain-driven codebases depend heavily on classes and interfaces.
Classes and Objects
class User {
public $name;
public function __construct($name) {
$this->name = $name;
}
public function greet() {
return "Hello, " . $this->name;
}
} Inheritance and Interfaces
Inheritance allows one class to extend another, while interfaces define contracts that multiple classes can implement. Advanced teams use these tools carefully to model responsibilities and reduce tight coupling.
Traits and Namespaces
Traits help share method implementations across classes. Namespaces organize code and avoid naming collisions. Together, they support larger codebases and reusable packages.
Real Example
An e-commerce platform might have User, Customer, Admin, PaymentGatewayInterface, and logging traits used across services. OOP becomes the language of architecture in such applications.