Solving several function argument validation/typehinting issues in PHP:
Primitive typehints:
function foo(string $foo) {}Mixed / advanced typehints:
function foo(array|string|null $foo, int/*between 3-10*/ $bar) {}"array of X" typehints:
function foo(Array_of_strings $foo) {}Validating / typehinting "pseudo named function paramters" through array members:
/**
* @param array $params
* - 'foo' => string
* - 'bar' => int
*/
function foo(array $params) {}Declaring required constants in classes (interface-style function):
class Foo {
/* const BAR required */
/* const BAZ required */
}{
"require": {
"yalesov/arg-validator": "2.*"
}
}Validates that $foo is an integer, throwing an InvalidArgumentException if validation failed.
use Yalesov\ArgValidator\ArgValidator;
function foo($foo)
{
ArgValidator::assert($foo, 'int');
// throw InvalidArgumentException if $foo is not int
// do something
}Validates that $foo is an integer, return boolean.
use Yalesov\ArgValidator\ArgValidator;
function foo($foo)
{
$result = ArgValidator::assert($foo, 'int', false);
// $result = false if invalid
// do something
}Full function signature:
public static function assert($arg, $checks, $exception = true)Valid argument types are specified through the $checks parameter. A string, or an array of the following accepted. $arg will be considered valid if it satisfies any one of the specified checks.
- Flags
arrayof: will check for an array of remaining specified types, instead of plain types, e.g.array('arrayOf', 'string', 'int')= an array of string, or an array of int. Note: Empty array will be considered validmin,max- combine with
int,float: min and max value - combine with
string: min and max length - combine with
array: min and max count
- combine with
- Types
intfloatnumericstringarraynullcallableboolresourcenotEmpty: equivalent to!empty()- (an array of scalars for in_array check), e.g.
array('foo', 'bar')will check forin_array($arg, array('foo', 'bar')). Note:ArgValidator::assert($arg, array('foo', 'bar'))will be interpreted as instanceof checks againstfooandbar. To specify an in_array check, wrap it in another array:ArgValidator::assert($arg, array(array('foo', 'bar'))). - (a string): assumed to be an instanceof check, should be a fully-qualified name of Class/Interface
use Yalesov\ArgValidator\ArgValidator;
function foo(array $params)
{
ArgValidator::arrayAssert($params, array(
'foo' => 'float',
'bar' => array('string', 'notSet'),
'baz' => array('int', 'string', 'min' => 2),
));
// $params['foo'] should be a float
// $params['bar'] should be a string, if set, or not set at all
// $params['baz'] can be either an int (>=2), or a string (strlen >= 2)
}Full function signature:
public static function arrayAssert(array $arg, array $checks, $exception = true)Valid argument types are same as above, except with the addition of a notSet type.
namespace Foo;
use Yalesov\ArgValidator\ArgValidator;
class FooClass {
const FOO = 'foo';
const BAR = 2;
}
ArgValidator::assertClassConstant('Foo\FooClass', array('FOO', 'BAR'));
// \Foo\FooClass must have the constants 'FOO' and 'BAR' setFull function signature:
public static function assertClassConstant($className, $constants, $exception = true)$className should be a fully-qualified class name; $constants should be an array of strings, each member being the constant name.
ArgValidator::assertClassConstant() will check for:
- the class
$classNameexists - the class has declared the required constants specified in
$constants
To centralize exception handling on argument validations, ArgValidator also provides two helper functions:
Assert that a class exists, throw InvalidArgumentException otherwise:
public static function assertClass($className, $exception = true)Throw an InvalidArgumentException about the given variable name is not set:
public static function throwIssetException($argName)Note: this function doesn't actually perform the isset check. I can't find a way to abstract the isset check away, without the variable being set in the first place (in order to act as argument to call this function with).