# Supported docblock annotations Psalm supports a wide range of docblock annotations. ## PHPDoc tags Psalm uses the following PHPDoc tags to understand your code: - [`@var`](https://docs.phpdoc.org/references/phpdoc/tags/var.html) Used for specifying the types of properties and variables - [`@return`](https://docs.phpdoc.org/references/phpdoc/tags/return.html) Used for specifying the return types of functions, methods and closures - [`@param`](https://docs.phpdoc.org/references/phpdoc/tags/param.html) Used for specifying types of parameters passed to functions, methods and closures - [`@property`](https://docs.phpdoc.org/references/phpdoc/tags/property.html) Used to specify what properties can be accessed on an object that uses `__get` and `__set` - [`@property-read`](https://docs.phpdoc.org/references/phpdoc/tags/property-read.html) Used to specify what properties can be read on object that uses `__get` - [`@property-write`](https://docs.phpdoc.org/references/phpdoc/tags/property-write.html) Used to specify what properties can be written on object that uses `__set` - [`@deprecated`](https://docs.phpdoc.org/references/phpdoc/tags/deprecated.html) Used to mark functions, methods, classes and interfaces as being deprecated ### Off-label usage of the `@var` tag The `@var` tag is supposed to only be used for properties. Psalm, taking a lead from PHPStorm and other static analysis tools, allows its use inline in the form `@var Type [VariableReference]`. If `VariableReference` is provided, it should be of the form `$variable` or `$variable->property`. If used above an assignment, Psalm checks whether the `VariableReference` matches the variable being assigned. If they differ, Psalm will assign the `Type` to `VariableReference` and use it in the expression below. If no `VariableReference` is given, the annotation tells Psalm that the right hand side of the expression, whether an assignment or a return, is of type `Type`. ```php /** @var string */ $a = $_GET['foo']; /** @var string $b */ $b = $_GET['bar']; function bat(): string { /** @var string */ return $_GET['bat']; } ``` ## Psalm-specific tags There are a number of custom tags that determine how Psalm treats your code. ### `@psalm-var`, `@psalm-param` and `@psalm-return` When specifying types in a format not supported phpDocumentor ([but supported by Psalm](#type-syntax)) you may wish to prepend `@psalm-` to the PHPDoc tag, so as to avoid confusing your IDE. If a `@psalm`-prefixed tag is given, Psalm will use it in place of its non-prefixed counterpart. ### `@psalm-suppress SomeIssueName` This annotation is used to suppress issues. It can be used in function docblocks, class docblocks and also inline, applying to the following statement. Function docblock example: ```php /** * @psalm-suppress PossiblyNullOperand */ function addString(?string $s) { echo "hello " . $s; } ``` Inline example: ```php function addString(?string $s) { /** @psalm-suppress PossiblyNullOperand */ echo "hello " . $s; } ``` ### `@psalm-assert`, `@psalm-assert-if-true` and `@psalm-assert-if-false` These annotations allow you to specify very basic facts about how a class of functions operate. For example, if you have a class that verified its input is an array of strings, you can make that clear to Psalm: ```php /** @psalm-assert string[] $arr */ function validateStringArray(array $arr) : void { foreach ($arr as $s) { if (!is_string($s)) { throw new UnexpectedValueException('Invalid value ' . gettype($s)); } } } ``` This enables you to call the `validateStringArray` function on some data and have Psalm understand that the given data *must* be an array of strings: ```php function takesString(string $s) : void {} function takesInt(int $s) : void {} function takesArray(array $arr) : void { takesInt($arr[0]); // this is fine validateStringArray($arr); takesInt($arr[0]); // this is an error foreach ($arr as $a) { takesString($a); // this is fine } } ``` Similarly, `@psalm-assert-if-true` and `@psalm-assert-if-false` will filter input if the function/method returns `true` and `false` respectively: ```php class A { public function isValid() : bool { return (bool) rand(0, 1); } } class B extends A { public function bar() : void {} } /** * @psalm-assert-if-true B $a */ function isValidB(A $a) : bool { return $a instanceof B && $a->isValid(); } /** * @psalm-assert-if-false B $a */ function isInvalidB(A $a) : bool { return $a instanceof B || !$a->isValid(); } function takesA(A $a) : void { if (isValidB($a)) { $a->bar(); } if (isInvalidB($a)) { // do something } else { $a->bar(); } $a->bar(); //error } ``` As well as getting Psalm to understand that the given data must be a certain type, you can also show that a variable must be not null: ```php /** * @psalm-assert !null $value */ function assertNotNull($value): void { // Some check that will mean the method will only complete if $value is not null. } ``` And you can check on null values: ```php /** * @psalm-assert-if-true null $value */ function isNull($value): bool { return ($value === null); } ``` ### `@psalm-ignore-nullable-return` This can be used to tell Psalm not to worry if a function/method returns null. It’s a bit of a hack, but occasionally useful for scenarios where you either have a very high confidence of a non-null value, or some other function guarantees a non-null value for that particular code path. ```php class Foo {} function takesFoo(Foo $f): void {} /** @psalm-ignore-nullable-return */ function getFoo(): ?Foo { return rand(0, 10000) > 1 ? new Foo() : null; } takesFoo(getFoo()); ``` ### `@psalm-ignore-falsable-return` This provides the same, but for `false`. Psalm uses this internally for functions like `preg_replace`, which can return false if the given input has encoding errors, but where 99.9% of the time the function operates as expected. ### `@template` and `@template-typeof` [Phan](https://github.com/phan/phan) first introduced the template annotation to allow classes to implement generic-like features. Psalm extends this with `@template-typeof` to allow you to type methods that instantiate objects e.g. ```php /** * @template T * @template-typeof T $class_name * @return T */ function instantiator(string $class_name) { return new $class_name(); } ``` Psalm also uses `@template` annotations in its stubbed versions of PHP array functions e.g. ```php /** * Takes one array with keys and another with values and combines them * * @template TKey * @template TValue * * @param array $arr * @param array $arr2 * @return array */ function array_combine(array $arr, array $arr2) {} ``` ### `@psalm-seal-properties` If you have a magic property getter/setter, you can use `@psalm-seal-properties` to instruct Psalm to disallow getting and setting any properties not contained in a list of `@property` (or `@property-read`/`@property-write`) annotations. ```php /** * @property string $foo * @psalm-seal-properties */ class A { public function __get(string $name): ?string { if ($name === "foo") { return "hello"; } } public function __set(string $name, $value): void {} } $a = new A(); $a->bar = 5; // this call fails ``` ## Type Syntax Psalm supports PHPDoc’s [type syntax](https://docs.phpdoc.org/guides/types.html), and also the [proposed PHPDoc PSR type syntax](https://github.com/php-fig/fig-standards/blob/master/proposed/phpdoc.md#appendix-a-types). ### Class constants Psalm supports a special meta-type for `MyClass::class` constants, `class-string`, which can be used everywhere `string` can. For example, given a function with a `string` parameter `$class_name`, you can use the annotation `@param class-string $class_name` to tell Psalm make sure that the function is always called with a `::class` constant in that position: ```php class A {} /** * @param class-string $s */ function takesClassName(string $s) : void {} ``` `takesClassName("A");` would trigger a `TypeCoercion` issue (or a `PossiblyInvalidArgument` issue if [`allowCoercionFromStringToClassConst`](configuration.md#coding-style) was set to `false` in your config), whereas `takesClassName(A::class)` is fine. ### Object-like Arrays Psalm supports a special format for arrays where the key offsets are known: object-like arrays. Given an array ```php ["hello", "world", "foo" => new stdClass, 28 => false]; ``` Psalm will type it internally as: ``` array{0: string, 1: string, foo: stdClass, 28: false} ``` If you want to be explicit about this, you can use this same format in `@var`, `@param` and `@return` types (or `@psalm-var`, `@psalm-param` and `@psalm-return` if you prefer to keep this special format separate). ```php function takesInt(int $i): void {} function takesString(string $s): void {} /** * @param (string|int)[] $arr * @psalm-param array{0: string, 1: int} $arr */ function foo(array $arr): void { takesString($arr[0]); takesInt($arr[1]); } foo(["cool", 4]); // passes foo([4, "cool"]); // fails ``` ### Callables and Closures Psalm supports a special format for `callable`s of the form ``` callable(Type1, OptionalType2=, ...SpreadType3):ReturnType ``` Using this annotation you can specify that a given function return a `Closure` e.g. ```php /** * @return Closure(bool):int */ function delayedAdd(int $x, int $y) : Closure { return function(bool $debug) use ($x, $y) { if ($debug) echo "got here" . PHP_EOL; return $x + $y; }; } $adder = delayedAdd(3, 4); echo $adder(true); ```