Return type declarations were added in PHP 7.
Similar to argument type declarations, return type declarations
define the type of the value that will be returned by a function. The available types are the same as those available for argument type declarations.
<?php
function sum($a, $b): float {
return $a + $b;
}
As of PHP 7.1.0, return values can be marked as nullable by prefixing
the type name with a question mark (?).
?string ?int ?array ?bool ?float
This allows the function to return the type defined or null, anything else will throw a TypeError if using Strict Mode, the default.
The strict_types
directive can be set globally, or toggled in code using the declare
construct.
declare(strict_types=1);
One of the primary benefits of using these features in PHP is clearer code. There is no ambiguity about the functions input and output. It also help detect silly mistakes like comparing a string and integer type value - or rather perform those evaluations in a more predictable way.
Here are some other discussions on this topic: