Information may be passed to functions via the argument list, which is a comma-delimited list of expressions. The arguments are evaluated from left to right.
PHP supports passing arguments by value (the default), passing by reference, and default argument values. Variable-length argument lists are also supported.
Example #1 Passing arrays to functions
<?php
function takes_array($input)
{
echo "$input[0] + $input[1] = ", $input[0]+$input[1];
}
?>
By default, function arguments are passed by value (so that if the value of the argument within the function is changed, it does not get changed outside of the function). To allow a function to modify its arguments, they must be passed by reference.
To have an argument to a function always passed by reference, prepend an ampersand (&) to the argument name in the function definition:
Example #2 Passing function parameters by reference
<?php
function add_some_extra(&$string)
{
$string .= 'and something extra.';
}
$str = 'This is a string, ';
add_some_extra($str);
echo $str; // outputs 'This is a string, and something extra.'
?>
A function may define C++-style default values for scalar arguments as follows:
Example #3 Use of default parameters in functions
<?php
function makecoffee($type = "cappuccino")
{
return "Making a cup of $type.\n";
}
echo makecoffee();
echo makecoffee(null);
echo makecoffee("espresso");
?>
The above example will output:
Making a cup of cappuccino. Making a cup of . Making a cup of espresso.
PHP also allows the use of arrays and the special type NULL
as default values, for example:
Example #4 Using non-scalar types as default values
<?php
function makecoffee($types = array("cappuccino"), $coffeeMaker = NULL)
{
$device = is_null($coffeeMaker) ? "hands" : $coffeeMaker;
return "Making a cup of ".join(", ", $types)." with $device.\n";
}
echo makecoffee();
echo makecoffee(array("cappuccino", "lavazza"), "teapot");
?>
The default value must be a constant expression, not (for example) a variable, a class member or a function call.
Note that when using default arguments, any defaults should be on the right side of any non-default arguments; otherwise, things will not work as expected. Consider the following code snippet:
Example #5 Incorrect usage of default function arguments
<?php
function makeyogurt($type = "acidophilus", $flavour)
{
return "Making a bowl of $type $flavour.\n";
}
echo makeyogurt("raspberry"); // won't work as expected
?>
The above example will output:
Warning: Missing argument 2 in call to makeyogurt() in /usr/local/etc/httpd/htdocs/phptest/functest.html on line 41 Making a bowl of raspberry .
Now, compare the above with this:
Example #6 Correct usage of default function arguments
<?php
function makeyogurt($flavour, $type = "acidophilus")
{
return "Making a bowl of $type $flavour.\n";
}
echo makeyogurt("raspberry"); // works as expected
?>
The above example will output:
Making a bowl of acidophilus raspberry.
Note: As of PHP 5, arguments that are passed by reference may have a default value.
Note:
Type declarations were also known as type hints in PHP 5.
Type declarations allow functions to require that parameters are of a certain type at call time. If the given value is of the incorrect type, then an error is generated: in PHP 5, this will be a recoverable fatal error, while PHP 7 will throw a TypeError exception.
To specify a type declaration, the type name should be added before the
parameter name. The declaration can be made to accept NULL
values if
the default value of the parameter is set to NULL
.
Type | Description | Minimum PHP version |
---|---|---|
Class/interface name |
The parameter must be an instanceof the given class or interface
name.
|
PHP 5.0.0 |
self |
The parameter must be an instanceof the same class as the one the
method is defined on. This can only be used on class and instance
methods.
|
PHP 5.0.0 |
array | The parameter must be an array. | PHP 5.1.0 |
callable | The parameter must be a valid callable. | PHP 5.4.0 |
bool | The parameter must be a boolean value. | PHP 7.0.0 |
float | The parameter must be a floating point number. | PHP 7.0.0 |
int | The parameter must be an integer. | PHP 7.0.0 |
string | The parameter must be a string. | PHP 7.0.0 |
iterable |
The parameter must be either an array or an instanceof Traversable.
|
PHP 7.1.0 |
object |
The parameter must be an object. | PHP 7.2.0 |
Aliases for the above scalar types are not supported. Instead, they are
treated as class or interface names. For example, using
boolean
as a parameter or return type will require
an argument or return value that is an instanceof
the class or
interface boolean
, rather than of type
bool:
<?php
function test(boolean $param) {}
test(true);
?>
The above example will output:
Fatal error: Uncaught TypeError: Argument 1 passed to test() must be an instance of boolean, boolean given, called in - on line 1 and defined in -:1
Example #7 Basic class type declaration
<?php
class C {}
class D extends C {}
// This doesn't extend C.
class E {}
function f(C $c) {
echo get_class($c)."\n";
}
f(new C);
f(new D);
f(new E);
?>
The above example will output:
C D Fatal error: Uncaught TypeError: Argument 1 passed to f() must be an instance of C, instance of E given, called in - on line 14 and defined in -:8 Stack trace: #0 -(14): f(Object(E)) #1 {main} thrown in - on line 8
Example #8 Basic interface type declaration
<?php
interface I { public function f(); }
class C implements I { public function f() {} }
// This doesn't implement I.
class E {}
function f(I $i) {
echo get_class($i)."\n";
}
f(new C);
f(new E);
?>
The above example will output:
C Fatal error: Uncaught TypeError: Argument 1 passed to f() must implement interface I, instance of E given, called in - on line 13 and defined in -:8 Stack trace: #0 -(13): f(Object(E)) #1 {main} thrown in - on line 8
Example #9 Typed pass-by-reference Parameters
Declared types of reference parameters are checked on function entry, but not when the function returns, so after the function had returned, the argument's type may have changed.
<?php
function array_baz(array &$param)
{
$param = 1;
}
$var = [];
array_baz($var);
var_dump($var);
array_baz($var);
?>
The above example will output something similar to:
int(1) Fatal error: Uncaught TypeError: Argument 1 passed to array_baz() must be of the type array, int given, called in %s on line %d
Example #10 Nullable type declaration
<?php
class C {}
function f(C $c = null) {
var_dump($c);
}
f(new C);
f(null);
?>
The above example will output:
object(C)#1 (0) { } NULL
By default, PHP will coerce values of the wrong type into the expected scalar type if possible. For example, a function that is given an integer for a parameter that expects a string will get a variable of type string.
It is possible to enable strict mode on a per-file basis. In strict
mode, only a variable of exact type of the type declaration will be
accepted, or a TypeError will be thrown. The
only exception to this rule is that an integer may be given
to a function expecting a float. Function calls from within
internal functions will not be affected by the strict_types
declaration.
To enable strict mode, the declare
statement is used with the
strict_types
declaration:
Enabling strict mode will also affect return type declarations.
Note:
Strict typing applies to function calls made from within the file with strict typing enabled, not to the functions declared within that file. If a file without strict typing enabled makes a call to a function that was defined in a file with strict typing, the caller's preference (weak typing) will be respected, and the value will be coerced.
Note:
Strict typing is only defined for scalar type declarations, and as such, requires PHP 7.0.0 or later, as scalar type declarations were added in that version.
Example #11 Strict typing
<?php
declare(strict_types=1);
function sum(int $a, int $b) {
return $a + $b;
}
var_dump(sum(1, 2));
var_dump(sum(1.5, 2.5));
?>
The above example will output:
int(3) Fatal error: Uncaught TypeError: Argument 1 passed to sum() must be of the type integer, float given, called in - on line 9 and defined in -:4 Stack trace: #0 -(9): sum(1.5, 2.5) #1 {main} thrown in - on line 4
Example #12 Weak typing
<?php
function sum(int $a, int $b) {
return $a + $b;
}
var_dump(sum(1, 2));
// These will be coerced to integers: note the output below!
var_dump(sum(1.5, 2.5));
?>
The above example will output:
int(3) int(3)
Example #13 Catching TypeError
<?php
declare(strict_types=1);
function sum(int $a, int $b) {
return $a + $b;
}
try {
var_dump(sum(1, 2));
var_dump(sum(1.5, 2.5));
} catch (TypeError $e) {
echo 'Error: '.$e->getMessage();
}
?>
The above example will output:
int(3) Error: Argument 1 passed to sum() must be of the type integer, float given, called in - on line 10
PHP has support for variable-length argument lists in
user-defined functions. This is implemented using the
...
token in PHP 5.6 and later, and using the
func_num_args(),
func_get_arg(), and
func_get_args() functions in PHP 5.5 and earlier.
...
in PHP 5.6+
In PHP 5.6 and later, argument lists may include the
...
token to denote that the function accepts a
variable number of arguments. The arguments will be passed into the
given variable as an array; for example:
Example #14 Using ...
to access variable arguments
<?php
function sum(...$numbers) {
$acc = 0;
foreach ($numbers as $n) {
$acc += $n;
}
return $acc;
}
echo sum(1, 2, 3, 4);
?>
The above example will output:
10
You can also use ...
when calling functions to unpack
an array or Traversable variable or
literal into the argument list:
Example #15 Using ...
to provide arguments
<?php
function add($a, $b) {
return $a + $b;
}
echo add(...[1, 2])."\n";
$a = [1, 2];
echo add(...$a);
?>
The above example will output:
3 3
You may specify normal positional arguments before the
...
token. In this case, only the trailing arguments
that don't match a positional argument will be added to the array
generated by ...
.
It is also possible to add a
type hint before the
...
token. If this is present, then all arguments
captured by ...
must be objects of the hinted class.
Example #16 Type hinted variable arguments
<?php
function total_intervals($unit, DateInterval ...$intervals) {
$time = 0;
foreach ($intervals as $interval) {
$time += $interval->$unit;
}
return $time;
}
$a = new DateInterval('P1D');
$b = new DateInterval('P2D');
echo total_intervals('d', $a, $b).' days';
// This will fail, since null isn't a DateInterval object.
echo total_intervals('d', null);
?>
The above example will output:
3 days Catchable fatal error: Argument 2 passed to total_intervals() must be an instance of DateInterval, null given, called in - on line 14 and defined in - on line 2
Finally, you may also pass variable arguments
by reference by
prefixing the ...
with an ampersand
(&
).
No special syntax is required to note that a function is variadic; however access to the function's arguments must use func_num_args(), func_get_arg() and func_get_args().
The first example above would be implemented as follows in PHP 5.5 and earlier:
Example #17 Accessing variable arguments in PHP 5.5 and earlier
<?php
function sum() {
$acc = 0;
foreach (func_get_args() as $n) {
$acc += $n;
}
return $acc;
}
echo sum(1, 2, 3, 4);
?>
The above example will output:
10