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en:dev:all:psr:psr-2

originating from PHP-FIG PSR-2

Coding Style Guide

This guide extends and expands the basic coding standard PSR-1.

The intent of this guide is to reduce cognitive friction when scanning code from different authors. It does so by enumerating a shared set of rules and expectations about how to format PHP code.

Overview

  • The code MUST follow PSR-1.
  • the code MUST use 4 spaces for indenting, not tabs.
  • There MUST NOT be a hard limit on line length; the soft limit MUST be 120 characters; lines SHOULD be 80 characters or less.
  • There MUST be one blank line after the namespace declaration, and there MUST be one blank line after the block of use declarations.
  • Opening braces for classes MUST go on the next line, and closing braces MUST go on the next line after the body.
  • Opening braces for methods MUST go on the next line, and closing braces MUST go on the next line after the body.
  • Visibility MUST be declared on all properties and methods; abstract and final MUST be declared before the visibility; static MUST be declared after the visibility.
  • Control structure keywords MUST have one space after them; method and function calls MUST NOT.
  • Opening braces for control structures MUST go on the same line, and closing braces MUST go on the next line after the body.
  • Opening parentheses for control structures MUST NOT have a space after them, and closing parentheses for control structures MUST NOT have a space before.

Example

This example encompasses some of the rules below as a quick overview: <PHP> <?php namespace Vendor\Package;

use FooInterface; use BarClass as Bar; use OtherVendor\OtherPackage\BazClass;

class Foo extends Bar implements FooInterface {

  public function sampleFunction($a, $b = null)
  {
      if ($a === $b) {
          bar();
      } elseif ($a > $b) {
          $foo->bar($arg1);
      } else {
          BazClass::bar($arg2, $arg3);
      }
  }
  final public static function bar()
  {
      // method body
  }

} </PHP>

General

Basic Coding Standard

The code MUST follow all rules outlined in PSR-1.

Files

  • All PHP files MUST use the Unix LF (linefeed) line ending.
  • All PHP files MUST end with a single blank line.
  • The closing ?> PHP tag MUST be omitted from files containing only PHP.

Lines

  • There MUST NOT be a hard limit on line length.
  • The soft limit on line length MUST be 120 characters; automated style checkers MUST warn but MUST NOT error at the soft limit.
  • Lines SHOULD NOT be longer than 80 characters; lines longer than that SHOULD be split into multiple subsequent lines of no more than 80 characters each.
  • There MUST NOT be trailing whitespace at the end of non-blank lines.
  • Blank lines MAY be added to improve readability and to indicate related blocks of code.
  • There MUST NOT be more than one statement per line.

Indenting

Code MUST use an indent of 4 spaces, and MUST NOT use tabs for indenting.

:!: Using only spaces, and not mixing spaces with tabs, helps to avoid problems with diffs, patches, history, and annotations. The use of spaces also makes it easy to insert fine-grained sub-indentation for inter-line alignment.

Keywords and True/False/Null

  • PHP keywords MUST be in lower case.
  • The PHP constants true, false, and null MUST be in lower case.

Namespace and Use Declarations

  • When present, there MUST be one blank line after the namespace declaration.
  • When present, all use declarations MUST go after the namespace declaration.
  • There MUST be one use keyword per declaration.
  • There MUST be one blank line after the use block.

For example: <PHP> <?php namespace Vendor\Package;

use FooClass; use BarClass as Bar; use OtherVendor\OtherPackage\BazClass;

… additional PHP code … </PHP> ===== Classes, Properties, and Methods ===== The term 'class' refers to all classes, interfaces, and traits. ==== Extends and Implements ==== The extends and implements keywords MUST be declared on the same line as the class name. The opening brace for the class MUST go on its own line; the closing brace for the class MUST go on the next line after the body. <PHP> <?php namespace Vendor\Package; use FooClass; use BarClass as Bar; use OtherVendor\OtherPackage\BazClass; class ClassName extends ParentClass implements \ArrayAccess, \Countable { constants, properties, methods } </PHP> Lists of implements MAY be split across multiple lines, where each subsequent line is indented once.
When doing so, the first item in the list MUST be on the next line, and there MUST be only one interface per line. <PHP> <?php namespace Vendor\Package;

use FooClass; use BarClass as Bar; use OtherVendor\OtherPackage\BazClass;

class ClassName extends ParentClass implements

  \ArrayAccess,
  \Countable,
  \Serializable

{

  // constants, properties, methods

} </PHP>

Properties

  • Visibility MUST be declared on all properties.
  • The var keyword MUST NOT be used to declare a property.
  • There MUST NOT be more than one property declared per statement.
  • Property names SHOULD NOT be prefixed with a single underscore to indicate protected or private visibility.

A property declaration looks like the following. <PHP> <?php namespace Vendor\Package;

class ClassName {

  public $foo = null;

} </PHP>

Methods

  • Visibility MUST be declared on all methods.
  • Method names SHOULD NOT be prefixed with a single underscore to indicate protected or private visibility.
  • Method names MUST NOT be declared with a space after the method name. The opening brace MUST go on its own line, and the closing brace MUST go on the next line following the body. There MUST NOT be a space after the opening parenthesis, and there MUST NOT be a space before the closing parenthesis.

A method declaration looks like the following. Note the placement of parentheses, commas, spaces, and braces: <PHP> <?php namespace Vendor\Package;

class ClassName {

  public function fooBarBaz($arg1, &$arg2, $arg3 = [])
  {
      // method body
  }

} </PHP>

Method Arguments

  • In the argument list, there MUST NOT be a space before each comma, and there MUST be one space after each comma.
  • Method arguments with default values MUST go at the end of the argument list.

<PHP> <?php namespace Vendor\Package;

class ClassName {

  public function foo($arg1, &$arg2, $arg3 = [])
  {
      // method body
  }

} </PHP>

  • Argument lists MAY be split across multiple lines, where each subsequent line is indented once. When doing so, the first item in the list MUST be on the next line, and there MUST be only one argument per line.
  • When the argument list is split across multiple lines, the closing parenthesis and opening brace MUST be placed together on their own line with one space between them.

<PHP> <?php namespace Vendor\Package;

class ClassName {

  public function aVeryLongMethodName(
      ClassTypeHint $arg1,
      &$arg2,
      array $arg3 = []
  ) {
      // method body
  }

} </PHP>

abstract, final, and static

  • When present, the abstract and final declarations MUST precede the visibility declaration.
  • When present, the static declaration MUST come after the visibility declaration.

<PHP> <?php namespace Vendor\Package;

abstract class ClassName {

  protected static $foo;
  abstract protected function zim();
  final public static function bar()
  {
      // method body
  }

} </PHP>

Method and Function Calls

When making a method or function call, there MUST NOT be a space between the method or function name and the opening parenthesis, there MUST NOT be a space after the opening parenthesis, and there MUST NOT be a space before the closing parenthesis. In the argument list, there MUST NOT be a space before each comma, and there MUST be one space after each comma. <PHP> bar(); $foo→bar($arg1); Foo::bar($arg2, $arg3); </PHP>

  • Argument lists MAY be split across multiple lines, where each subsequent line is indented once. When doing so, the first item in the list MUST be on the next line, and there MUST be only one argument per line.
  • When splitting an argument list, the closing parenthesis MUST be on a separate line without a space character in between.

<PHP> $foo→bar(

  $longArgument,
  $longerArgument,
  $muchLongerArgument

); </PHP>

Control Structures

The general style rules for control structures are as follows:

  • There MUST be one space after the control structure keyword
  • There MUST NOT be a space after the opening parenthesis
  • There MUST NOT be a space before the closing parenthesis
  • There MUST be one space between the closing parenthesis and the opening brace
  • The structure body MUST be indented once
  • The closing brace MUST be on the next line after the body

The body of each structure MUST be enclosed by braces. This standardizes how the structures look, and reduces the likelihood of introducing errors as new lines get added to the body.

if, elseif, else

An if structure looks like the following. Note the placement of parentheses, spaces, and braces; and that else and elseif MUST be on the same line as the closing brace from the earlier body separated by one space character. <PHP> if ($expr1) {

  // if body

} elseif ($expr2) {

  // elseif body

} else {

  // else body;

} </PHP> The keyword elseif SHOULD be used instead of else if so that all control keywords look like single words.

switch, case

A switch structure looks like the following. Note the placement of parentheses, spaces, and braces. The case statement MUST be indented once from switch, and the break keyword (or other terminating keyword) MUST be indented at the same level as the case body. There MUST be a comment such as // no break when 'fall-through' is intentional in a non-empty case body. <PHP> switch ($expr) {

  case 0:
      echo 'First case, with a break';
      break;
  case 1:
      echo 'Second case, which falls through';
      // no break
  case 2:
  case 3:
  case 4:
      echo 'Third case, return instead of break';
      return;
  default:
      echo 'Default case';
      break;

} </PHP>

while, do while

A while statement looks like the following. Note the placement of parentheses, spaces, and braces. <PHP> while ($expr) {

  // structure body

} </PHP> Similarly, a do while statement looks like the following. Note the placement of parentheses, spaces, and braces. <PHP> do {

  // structure body;

} while ($expr); </PHP>

for

A for statement looks like the following. Note the placement of parentheses, spaces, and braces. <PHP> for ($i = 0; $i < 10; $i++) {

  // for body

} </PHP>

foreach

A foreach statement looks like the following. Note the placement of parentheses, spaces, and braces. <PHP> foreach ($iterable as $key ⇒ $value) {

  // foreach body

} </PHP>

try, catch, finally

A try catch block looks like the following. Note the placement of parentheses, spaces, and braces. <PHP> try {

  // try body

} catch (FirstExceptionType $e) {

  // catch body

} catch (OtherExceptionType $e) {

  // catch body

} finally {

  // finally body

} </PHP>

Closures

  • Closures MUST be declared with a space after the function keyword, and a space before and after the use keyword.
  • The opening brace MUST go on the same line as the function keyword, and the closing brace MUST go on the next line following the body.
  • There MUST NOT be a space after the opening parenthesis of the argument list or variable list, and there MUST NOT be a space before the closing parenthesis of the argument list or variable list.
  • In the argument list and variable list, there MUST NOT be a space before each comma, and there MUST be one space after each comma.
  • Closure arguments with default values MUST go at the end of the argument list.

A closure declaration looks like the following. Note the placement of parentheses, commas, spaces, and braces: <PHP> $closureWithArgs = function ($arg1, $arg2) {

  // body

};

$closureWithArgsAndVars = function ($arg1, $arg2) use ($var1, $var2) {

  // body

}; </PHP>

  • Argument lists and variable lists MAY be split across multiple lines, where each subsequent line is indented once. When doing so, the first item in the list MUST be on the next line, and there MUST be only one argument or variable per line.
  • When the ending list (whether or arguments or variables) is split across multiple lines, the closing parenthesis and opening brace MUST be placed together on their own line with one space between them.
  • The following are examples of closures with and without argument lists and variable lists split across multiple lines.

<PHP> $longArgs_noVars = function (

  $longArgument,
  $longerArgument,
  $muchLongerArgument

) {

 // body

};

$noArgs_longVars = function () use (

  $longVar1,
  $longerVar2,
  $muchLongerVar3

) {

 // body

};

$longArgs_longVars = function (

  $longArgument,
  $longerArgument,
  $muchLongerArgument

) use (

  $longVar1,
  $longerVar2,
  $muchLongerVar3

) {

 // body

};

$longArgs_shortVars = function (

  $longArgument,
  $longerArgument,
  $muchLongerArgument

) use ($var1) {

 // body

};

$shortArgs_longVars = function ($arg) use (

  $longVar1,
  $longerVar2,
  $muchLongerVar3

) {

 // body

}; </PHP> Note that the formatting rules also apply when the closure is used directly in a function or method call as an argument. <PHP> $foo→bar(

  $arg1,
  function ($arg2) use ($var1) {
      // body
  },
  $arg3

); </PHP>

en/dev/all/psr/psr-2.txt · Zuletzt geändert: 31.03.2017 06:59 von Manuela v.d.Decken