What if you try Whatever::$dynamicProperty?
No it's not. It should not be necessary as classes should not be using public properties anyway - some classes have an instance() method that allows you to get the instance from the facade if you need to, so Request::instance()->server works.
Marwelln said:
What if you try
Whatever::$dynamicProperty?
Yeah, you're right, however it's how anlutro wrote: it's not possible since it throws Access to undeclared static property
Thank you for your help :)
How did you define the facade class and reference by the app::bind method?
Did you link your facade alias with your class in your start file?
The solution that younes0 gives you go well but why you cannot access using?
MyFacade::myProperty
Could you show the source of your facade and the accessor? Facades should literally be a pass through, a way of statically accessing instances of a class.
Auth::check(); // statically accessed but is actually called check() on an instance of Guard.
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