4

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?

1 Answer 1

7

There is currently no way to allow a method with a scalar type hint to automatically type juggle inbound NULL values to the declared type.

Per the RFC responsible for introducing this feature into PHP 7:

The weak type checking rules for the new scalar type declarations are mostly (emphasis added) the same as those of extension and built-in PHP functions. The only exception to this is the handling of NULL: in order to be consistent with our existing type declarations for classes, callables and arrays, NULL is not accepted by default, unless it is a parameter and is explicitly given a default value of NULL.

However, NULL values can be accepted as NULLs in the following scenarios:

<?php

class MyClass
{
    // PHP 7.0+
    public function testA(int $arg = null)
    {
        if (null === $arg) {
            echo 'The argument is NULL!';
        }
    }

    // PHP 7.1+
    // https://wiki.php.net/rfc/nullable_types
    public function testB(?int $arg)
    {
        if (null === $arg) {
            echo 'The argument is NULL!';
        }
    }
}

$obj = new MyClass();
$obj->testA(null); // The argument is NULL!
$obj->testB(null); // The argument is NULL!

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