1--TEST-- 2Introducing new private variables of the same name in a subclass is ok, and does not lead to any output. That is consitent with normal inheritance handling. (relevant to #60536) 3--FILE-- 4<?php 5error_reporting(E_ALL | E_STRICT); 6 7class Base { 8 private $hello; 9} 10 11trait THello1 { 12 private $hello; 13} 14 15// Now we use the trait, which happens to introduce another private variable 16// but they are distinct, and not related to each other, so no warning. 17echo "PRE-CLASS-GUARD\n"; 18class SameNameInSubClassNoNotice extends Base { 19 use THello1; 20} 21echo "POST-CLASS-GUARD\n"; 22 23// now the same with a class that defines the property itself, 24// that should give the expected strict warning. 25 26class Notice extends Base { 27 use THello1; 28 private $hello; 29} 30echo "POST-CLASS-GUARD2\n"; 31?> 32--EXPECTF-- 33PRE-CLASS-GUARD 34POST-CLASS-GUARD 35 36Strict Standards: Notice and THello1 define the same property ($hello) in the composition of Notice. This might be incompatible, to improve maintainability consider using accessor methods in traits instead. Class was composed in %sbug60536_004.php on line %d 37POST-CLASS-GUARD2 38