220

I am confused about default values for PHP functions. Say I have a function like this:

function foo($blah, $x = "some value", $y = "some other value") {
    // code here!
}

What if I want to use the default argument for $x and set a different argument for $y?

I have been experimenting with different ways and I am just getting more confused. For example, I tried these two:

foo("blah", null, "test");
foo("blah", "", "test");

But both of those do not result in a proper default argument for $x. I have also tried to set it by variable name.

foo("blah", $x, $y = "test");   

I fully expected something like this to work. But it doesn't work as I expected at all. It seems like no matter what I do, I am going to have to end up typing in the default arguments anyway, every time I invoke the function. And I must be missing something obvious.

10
  • 95
    You're probably not missing anything, the PHP developers probably missed this. Feb 6, 2012 at 20:40
  • That's an interesting question. I've never actually had the need to do this as you've stated since I only use default args to expand functions inherited by other programmers when I am not sure what depends on the original. I'm curious about an answer.
    – Kai Qing
    Feb 6, 2012 at 20:40
  • 3
    One of the best questions I've seen in a while! Have you tried passing nothing? foo("blah", , "test");? Feb 6, 2012 at 20:41
  • 3
    The rule is that default arguments can only follow arguments. That is you could have foo("blah") and x,y are default, or foo("Blah","xyz") and y is the default.
    – Mouse Food
    Feb 6, 2012 at 20:41
  • 3
    Expected behavior. See "Default argument values" section in: php.net/manual/en/functions.arguments.php -- null value and empty string are accepted as actual arguments to the function
    – jmdavalos
    Dec 10, 2019 at 14:04

16 Answers 16

221

I would propose changing the function declaration as follows so you can do what you want:

function foo($blah, $x = null, $y = null) {
    if (null === $x) {
        $x = "some value";
    }

    if (null === $y) {
        $y = "some other value";
    }

    code here!

}

This way, you can make a call like foo('blah', null, 'non-default y value'); and have it work as you want, where the second parameter $x still gets its default value.

With this method, passing a null value means you want the default value for one parameter when you want to override the default value for a parameter that comes after it.

As stated in other answers,

default parameters only work as the last arguments to the function. If you want to declare the default values in the function definition, there is no way to omit one parameter and override one following it.

If I have a method that can accept varying numbers of parameters, and parameters of varying types, I often declare the function similar to the answer shown by Ryan P.

Here is another example (this doesn't answer your question, but is hopefully informative:

public function __construct($params = null)
{
    if ($params instanceof SOMETHING) {
        // single parameter, of object type SOMETHING
    } elseif (is_string($params)) {
        // single argument given as string
    } elseif (is_array($params)) {
        // params could be an array of properties like array('x' => 'x1', 'y' => 'y1')
    } elseif (func_num_args() == 3) {
        $args = func_get_args();

        // 3 parameters passed
    } elseif (func_num_args() == 5) {
        $args = func_get_args();
        // 5 parameters passed
    } else {
        throw new \InvalidArgumentException("Could not figure out parameters!");
    }
}
3
  • WHy not $x = isset($x) ? $x :'default value'; ?
    – zloctb
    Oct 19, 2015 at 7:44
  • @zloctb this is a clean and readable null check. Looks like it is developer preference. Either $x = isset($x) ? $x :'default value'; or $x = is_null($x) ?'default value':$x; would work as well as this solution. It is a preference choice about readability and maintenance. Dec 31, 2015 at 0:04
  • 10
    Just to clarify for future readers. The first solution obviously makes it impossible to assign a real null value to the parameter, since every time it would assign the default value. Even in case you had another special value for when you actually want a null (e.g. when $x == "use_null" make $x = null), then you wouldn't be able to assign such special value as the literal value of the parameter (in this case, the "use_null" string). So just be sure to use a unique, never desired "key" for when you want to use the default value (and you want null to be a valid option)
    – DiegoDD
    Nov 3, 2016 at 18:03
45

Optional arguments only work at the end of a function call. There is no way to specify a value for $y in your function without also specifying $x. Some languages support this via named parameters (VB/C# for example), but not PHP.

You can emulate this if you use an associative array for parameters instead of arguments -- i.e.

function foo(array $args = array()) {
    $x = !isset($args['x']) ? 'default x value' : $args['x'];
    $y = !isset($args['y']) ? 'default y value' : $args['y'];

    ...
}

Then call the function like so:

foo(array('y' => 'my value'));
4
  • 1
    Your condition should really be isset($args['x']), as it would currently replace an empty string, empty array, or false with the default value.
    – user142162
    Feb 6, 2012 at 20:44
  • @TimCooper lol I went to change based on your first comment that it should be '=== null', went and changed my answer to use isset instead, then came back to see you changed your comment too. :D
    – kitti
    Feb 6, 2012 at 20:47
  • Ah, drat! I don't like that at all... Oh well, you can't have everything. I suppose I will have to put a little more thought into the order of my default arguments then. Thanks!
    – renosis
    Feb 6, 2012 at 20:48
  • 1
    Unfortunately, you will not be able to assign null with this answer. This is a better option: $x = !array_key_exists('x',$args) ? 'default x value' : $args['x']; Nov 7, 2018 at 15:21
30

It is actually possible:

foo( 'blah', (new ReflectionFunction('foo'))->getParameters()[1]->getDefaultValue(), 'test');

Whether you would want to do so is another story :)


UPDATE:

The reasons to avoid this solution are:

  • it is (arguably) ugly
  • it has an obvious overhead.
  • as the other answers proof, there are alternatives

But it can actually be useful in situations where:

  • you don't want/can't change the original function.

  • you could change the function but:

    • using null (or equivalent) is not an option (see DiegoDD's comment)
    • you don't want to go either with an associative or with func_num_args()
    • your life depends on saving a couple of LOCs

About the performance, a very simple test shows that using the Reflection API to get the default parameters makes the function call 25 times slower, while it still takes less than one microsecond. You should know if you can to live with that.

Of course, if you mean to use it in a loop, you should get the default value beforehand.

3
  • 1
    What is the reason for not wanting to do this? Seems pretty handy.
    – Bryan
    Sep 15, 2017 at 16:22
  • Lovely but unfortunately doesn't work on internal functions: Uncaught ReflectionException: Cannot determine default value for internal functions which is a bit stupid since the docs read: "Gets the default value of the parameter for any user-defined or internal function or method" Oct 15, 2020 at 20:38
  • Ah yes. The beauty of PHP Apr 5, 2022 at 11:30
9
function image(array $img)
{
    $defaults = array(
        'src'    => 'cow.png',
        'alt'    => 'milk factory',
        'height' => 100,
        'width'  => 50
    );

    $img = array_merge($defaults, $img);
    /* ... */
}
3
  • 2
    Am I missing something? This doesn't seem to answer the question at all, but it has 7 upvotes. Maybe adding a bit of explanation would help? Mar 20, 2018 at 18:29
  • 3
    @SeantheBean: true, an explanation would be better, but his point is: since PHP does not have named arguments, use an associative array as its single parameter.
    – MestreLion
    Sep 15, 2018 at 11:57
  • 2
    It is more helpful to use the example given in the question, e.g. $defaults = [ 'x' => 'some value', 'y' => 'some other value']; Nov 7, 2018 at 15:24
9

PHP 8 using Named Arguments

What if I want to use the default value for argument $x and set a value for $y? foo($blah, $x = "some value", $y = "some other value")

Usage-1:

foo(blah: "blah", y: "test");

Usage-2:

// use names to address last arguments
foo("blah", y: "test");

Native functions will also use this feature

htmlspecialchars($string, double_encode: false);
// Same as
htmlspecialchars($string, ENT_COMPAT | ENT_HTML401, 'UTF-8', false);

About the Feature and Documentation

Named arguments allow passing arguments to a function based on the parameter name, rather than the parameter position. This makes the meaning of the argument self-documenting, makes the arguments order-independent, and allows skipping default values arbitrarily.

IDE Support

Netbeans 12.3 fully supports PHP 8.0 syntax including this feature, with the exception of code completion for named arguments.

5

The only way I know of doing it is by omitting the parameter. The only way to omit the parameter is to rearrange the parameter list so that the one you want to omit is after the parameters that you HAVE to set. For example:

function foo($blah, $y = "some other value", $x = "some value")

Then you can call foo like:

foo("blah", "test");

This will result in:

$blah = "blah";
$y = "test";
$x = "some value";
4

In PHP 8 we can use named arguments for this problem.

So we could solve the problem described by the original poster of this question:

What if I want to use the default argument for $x and set a different argument for $y?

With:

foo(blah: "blah", y: "test");

Reference: https://wiki.php.net/rfc/named_params (in particular the "Skipping defaults" section)

3

I recently had this problem and found this question and answers. While the above questions work, the problem is that they don't show the default values to IDEs that support it (like PHPStorm).

enter image description here

if you use null you won't know what the value would be if you leave it blank.

The solution I prefer is to put the default value in the function definition also:

protected function baseItemQuery(BoolQuery $boolQuery, $limit=1000, $sort = [], $offset = 0, $remove_dead=true)
{
    if ($limit===null) $limit =1000;
    if ($sort===null) $sort = [];
    if ($offset===null) $offset = 0;
    ...

The only difference is that I need to make sure they are the same - but I think that's a small price to pay for the additional clarity.

2
  • Internal usage of ReflectionFunction on itself would save the price! Aug 22, 2019 at 15:34
  • Regarding IDEs - it is easy enough to get to the function definition - ctrl + click function or class name in PHPStorm. So long as you stick to some common approach of putting the defaults as the very first line(s), it's easy to adapt. That being said, there is no solution without a downside - they all have their disadvantages.
    – ClarkeyBoy
    Dec 3, 2021 at 16:48
2

You can't do this directly, but a little code fiddling makes it possible to emulate.

function foo($blah, $x = false, $y = false) {
  if (!$x) $x = "some value";
  if (!$y) $y = "some other value";

  // code
}
2
  • 6
    That would work, but I find using null in this instance to be conceptually neater than false.
    – TRiG
    Apr 16, 2012 at 20:33
  • Adding to TriG's comment, false is a riskier choice than null, because php is a non-strict language. !$x will be true for several different inputs, that may surprise the programmer: 0, ''. Whereas with null, you can use !isset as a stricter test. Feb 24, 2019 at 20:27
1

You can also check if you have an empty string as argument so you can call like:

foo('blah', "", 'non-default y value', null);

Below the function:

function foo($blah, $x = null, $y = null, $z = null) {
    if (null === $x || "" === $x) {
        $x = "some value";
    }

    if (null === $y || "" === $y) {
        $y = "some other value";
    }

    if (null === $z || "" === $z) {
        $z = "some other value";
    }

    code here!

}

It doesn't matter if you fill null or "", you will still get the same result.

1

My 2 cents with null coalescing operator ?? (since PHP 7)

function foo($blah, $x = null, $y = null) {
    $varX = $x ?? 'Default value X';
    $varY = $y ?? 'Default value Y';
    // ...
}

You can check more examples on my repl.it

0

This is case, when object are better - because you can set up your object to hold x and y , set up defaults etc.

Approach with array is near to create object ( In fact, object is bunch of parameters and functions which will work over object, and function taking array will work over some bunch ov parameters )

Cerainly you can always do some tricks to set null or something like this as default

0

Pass an array to the function, instead of individual parameters and use null coalescing operator (PHP 7+).

Below, I'm passing an array with 2 items. Inside the function, I'm checking if value for item1 is set, if not assigned default vault.

$args = ['item2' => 'item2',
        'item3' => 'value3'];

    function function_name ($args) {
        isset($args['item1']) ? $args['item1'] : 'default value';
    }
1
  • You can use $args['item1'] = $args['item1']??'default value'; in PHP 7+. if $args['item1'] is null then default value string will assign to $args['item1']
    – Sadee
    Nov 26, 2019 at 11:26
0

PHP 8 way of doing this:

function foo($blah, ?$x, ?$y) {
    $x = $x ?? "some value";
    $y = $y ?? "some other value";
}
1
  • "Modern"? This answer won't age well. Please specify what PHP versions this is relevant for.
    – thelr
    Jun 22, 2021 at 19:30
0

Just another way to write:

function sum($args){
    $a = $args['a'] ?? 1;
    $b = $args['b'] ?? 1;
    return $a + $b;
}

echo sum(['a' => 2, 'b' => 3]); // 5 
echo sum(['a' => 2]); // 3 (2+1)
echo sum(['b' => 3]); // 4 (1+3)
echo sum([]); // 2 (1+1)
-1
<?php
function info($name="George",$age=18) {
echo "$name is $age years old.<br>";
}
info();     // prints default values(number of values = 2)
info("Nick");   // changes first default argument from George to Nick
info("Mark",17);    // changes both default arguments' values

?>

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