paragonie / typed-arrays
Strictly typed scalar arrays for PHP 8.3 and newer
dev-main
2024-05-14 21:24 UTC
Requires
- php: ^8.3
Requires (Dev)
- phpunit/phpunit: ^9
- vimeo/psalm: ^4
This package is auto-updated.
Last update: 2024-12-14 22:44:25 UTC
README
Requires PHP 8.3. This is best described through example:
<?php require_once 'vendor/autoload.php'; class Foo { public function __construct( public readonly string⟦⟧ $foo, public readonly int⟦⟧ $bar ) {} } $x = new Foo( string⟦⟧('apple', 'bee'), int⟦⟧(4, 5, 120000), ); var_dump($x->foo, $x->bar); var_dump($x->foo[1]);
This should output the following:
object(string⟦⟧)#5 (2) {
[0]=>
string(5) "apple"
[1]=>
string(3) "bee"
}
object(int⟦⟧)#6 (3) {
[0]=>
int(4)
[1]=>
int(5)
[2]=>
int(120000)
}
string(3) "bee"
If you try to pass an incorrect type, you'll get a TypeError
:
<?php declare(strict_types=1); require_once 'vendor/autoload.php'; class Foo { public function __construct( public readonly string⟦⟧ $foo ) {} } $x = new Foo( string⟦⟧('apple', 'bee', 25) ); var_dump($x->foo, $x->bar);
Should produce:
Fatal error: Uncaught TypeError: string⟦⟧(): Argument #3 must be of type string, int given
What Is This Package Doing?
We are using Unicode characters (⟦
and ⟧
) to create a class that implements ArrayAccess
.
All arguments to these types are then strictly typed.
In effect, we have turned a class into a typed array that your IDE will not complain about.
Does It Support Multi-Level Types? e.g. string⟦⟧⟦⟧
You betcha.
<?php declare(strict_types=1); require_once 'vendor/autoload.php'; class Bar { public function __construct( public readonly string⟦⟧⟦⟧ $double, ) {} } $test = new Bar(string⟦⟧⟦⟧( string⟦⟧('test'), string⟦⟧('example'), )); var_dump($test->double);
This will produce:
object(string⟦⟧⟦⟧)#7 (2) {
[0]=>
object(string⟦⟧)#5 (1) {
[0]=>
string(4) "test"
}
[1]=>
object(string⟦⟧)#6 (1) {
[0]=>
string(7) "example"
}
}
Does This Support Arrays of Classes?
Of course!
<?php declare(strict_types=1); require_once 'vendor/autoload.php'; class Foo {} class Bar { public function __construct( public readonly Foo⟦⟧ $example ) {} } $test = new Bar(new Foo⟦⟧(new Foo)); var_dump($test);
Output:
object(Bar)#2 (1) {
["example"]=>
object(Foo⟦⟧)#5 (1) {
[0]=>
object(Foo)#6 (0) {
}
}
}
How Does This Create Types for My Classes?
See: the autoloader.