Psalm tries to understand your codebase as best as possible so it can find errors.
It has a few features that go further than other similar tools:
- **Mixed type warnings**<br/>
If Psalm cannot infer a type for an expression then it uses a `mixed` placeholder. Any `mixed` type is a sign of an insufficiently-documented codebase. You can configure Psalm warn when encountering `mixed` types by adding *`totallyTyped="true"`* attribute to your XML config file.
- **Logic checks**<br/>
Psalm keeps track of logical assertions made about your code, so `if ($a && $a) {}` and `if ($a && !$a) {}` are both treated as issues. Psalm also keeps track of logical assertions made in prior code paths, preventing issues like `if ($a) {} elseif ($a) {}`.
- **Property initialisation checks**<br/>
Psalm checks that all properties of a given object have values after the constructor is called.
- **Support for complicated array shapes**<br/>
Psalm has support for [object-like arrays](supported_annotations.md#object-like-arrays), allowing you to specify types for all keys of an array if you so wish.
Psalm also has a few features to make it perform as well as possible on large codebases:
- **Multi-threaded mode**<br/>
Using the `--threads=[X]` command line option will run Psalm's analysis stage on [X] threads. Useful for large codebases, it has a massive impact on performance.
- **Incremental checks**<br/>
When using the `--diff` command line option, Psalm will only analyse files that have changed *and* files that reference them.
- Etsy's [Phan](https://github.com/etsy/phan), which uses nikic's [`php-ast`](https://github.com/nikic/php-ast) extension to create an abstract syntax tree
- Facebook's [Hack](http://hacklang.org/), a PHP-like language that supports many advanced typing features natively, so docblocks aren't necessary.