As of PHP 7.0, the scalar type hints int
, float
, string
, and bool
can be included in method signatures. By default, these type declarations operate in weak/coercive mode (or "type juggling" mode). According to the PHP manual:
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.
But even though it is possible to coerce NULL into the integer 0, a method with an int
typehint will refuse to coerce an inbound value of NULL
to the integer 0.
<?php
class MyClass
{
public function test(int $arg)
{
echo $arg;
}
}
$obj = new MyClass();
$obj->test('123'); // 123
$obj->test(false); // 0
$obj->test(null); // TypeError: Argument 1 passed to MyClass::test()
// must be of the type integer, null given
And similarly, even though it is possible to coerce NULL into the boolean false
, a method with a bool
typehint will refuse to coerce an inbound value of NULL
to the boolean false
. The same goes for the float
and string
type hints as well.
This behavior seems to contradict the documentation on php.net. What's going on here?