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PHP-Parser/doc/component/Constant_expression_evaluation.markdown
Nikita Popov a513ccabb7 Improve constant evaluation and add docs
Split into evaluateDirectly() and evaluateSilently(), to be able
to treat errors more gracefully. Add documentation for constant
evaluation.
2018-01-27 17:47:45 +01:00

3.3 KiB

Constant expression evaluation

Initializers for constants, properties, parameters, etc. have limited support for expressions. For example:

<?php
class Test {
    const SECONDS_IN_HOUR = 60 * 60;
    const SECONDS_IN_DAY = 24 * self::SECONDS_IN_HOUR;
}

PHP-Parser supports evaluation of such constant expressions through the ConstExprEvaluator class:

<?php

use PhpParser\{ConstExprEvaluator, ConstExprEvaluationException};

$evalutator = new ConstExprEvaluator();
try {
    $value = $evalutator->evaluateSilently($someExpr);
} catch (ConstExprEvaluationException $e) {
    // Either the expression contains unsupported expression types,
    // or an error occurred during evaluation
}

Error handling

The constant evaluator provides two methods, evaluateDirectly() and evaluateSilently(), which differ in error behavior. evaluateDirectly() will evaluate the expression as PHP would, including any generated warnings or Errors. evaluateSilently() will instead convert warnings and Errors into a ConstExprEvaluationException. For example:

<?php

use PhpParser\{ConstExprEvaluator, ConstExprEvaluationException};
use PhpParser\Node\{Expr, Scalar};

$evaluator = new ConstExprEvaluator();

// 10 / 0
$expr = new Expr\BinaryOp\Div(new Scalar\LNumber(10), new Scalar\LNumber(0));

var_dump($evaluator->evaluateDirectly($expr)); // float(INF)
// Warning: Division by zero

try {
    $evaluator->evaluateSilently($expr);
} catch (ConstExprEvaluationException $e) {
    var_dump($e->getPrevious()->getMessage()); // Division by zero
}

For the purposes of static analysis, you will likely want to use evaluateSilently() and leave erroring expressions unevaluated.

Unsupported expressions and evaluator fallback

The constant expression evaluator supports all expression types that are permitted in constant expressions, apart from the following:

  • Scalar\MagicConst\*
  • Expr\ConstFetch (only null/false/true are handled)
  • Expr\ClassConstFetch

Handling these expression types requires non-local information, such as which global constants are defined. By default, the evaluator will throw a ConstExprEvaluationException when it encounters an unsupported expression type.

It is possible to override this behavior and support resolution for these expression types by specifying an evaluation fallback function:

<?php

use PhpParser\{ConstExprEvaluator, ConstExprEvaluationException};
use PhpParser\Node\Expr;

$evalutator = new ConstExprEvaluator(function(Expr $expr) {
    if ($expr instanceof Expr\ConstFetch) {
        return fetchConstantSomehow($expr);
    }
    if ($expr instanceof Expr\ClassConstFetch) {
        return fetchClassConstantSomehow($expr);
    }
    // etc.
    throw new ConstExprEvaluationException(
        "Expression of type {$expr->getType()} cannot be evaluated");
});

try {
    $evalutator->evaluateSilently($someExpr);
} catch (ConstExprEvaluationException $e) {
    // Handle exception
}

Implementers are advised to ensure that evaluation of indirect constant references cannot lead to infinite recursion. For example, the following code could lead to infinite recursion if constant lookup is implemented naively.

<?php
class Test {
    const A = self::B;
    const B = self::A;
}