at my working place (php only) we have a base class for database abstraction. When you want to add a new database table to the base layer, you have to create a subclass of this base class and override some methods to define individual behaviour for using this table. The normal behaviour should stay the same.
Now I have seen many new programmers at our company, who just override the method for the default behaviour. Some are so "nice" to put in all the default behaviour and just add there individual stuff where they like it, others kill themself trying to use the baseclass and their inheritor.
My first thought to solve this problem, was thinking about abstract methods that should be overriden by inheriting classes. But beside other arguments against abstract methods, "abstract" just does not show why the baseclass can't be used by its own and why these function should be overriden.
After some googling around I didn't find a good answer to implementing "real" virtual functions in php (just that there is a virtual function, that nearly kills all hope of a concrete implementation).
So, what would you do with this matter?