# 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/latest/references/phpdoc/tags/var.html) Used for specifying the types of properties and variables - [`@return`](https://docs.phpdoc.org/latest/references/phpdoc/tags/return.html) Used for specifying the return types of functions, methods and closures - [`@param`](https://docs.phpdoc.org/latest/references/phpdoc/tags/param.html) Used for specifying types of parameters passed to functions, methods and closures - [`@property`](https://docs.phpdoc.org/latest/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/latest/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/latest/references/phpdoc/tags/property-write.html) Used to specify what properties can be written on object that uses `__set` - [`@method`](https://docs.phpdoc.org/latest/references/phpdoc/tags/method.html) Used to specify which magic methods are available on object that uses `__call`. - [`@deprecated`](https://docs.phpdoc.org/latest/references/phpdoc/tags/deprecated.html) Used to mark functions, methods, classes and interfaces as being deprecated - [`@internal`](https://docs.phpdoc.org/latest/references/phpdoc/tags/internal.html) used to mark classes, functions and properties that are internal to an application or library. ### 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 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. ### `@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 bar = 5; // this call fails ``` ### `@psalm-internal` Used to mark a class, property or function as internal to a given namespace. Psalm treats this slightly differently to the PHPDoc `@internal` tag. For `@internal`, an issue is raised if the calling code is in a namespace completely unrelated to the namespace of the calling code, i.e. not sharing the first element of the namespace. In contrast for `@psalm-internal`, the docbloc line must specify a namespace. An issue is raised if the calling code is not within the given namespace. As other tools do not support `@psalm-internal`, it may only be used in conjunction with `@internal`. ```php s = $s; } } $b = new B("hello"); echo $b->s; $b->s = "boo"; // disallowed ``` ### `@psalm-mutation-free` Used to annotate a class method that does not mutate state, either internally or externally of the class's scope. ```php s = $s; } /** * @psalm-mutation-free */ public function getShort() : string { return substr($this->s, 0, 5); } /** * @psalm-mutation-free */ public function getShortMutating() : string { $this->s .= "hello"; // this is a bug return substr($this->s, 0, 5); } } ``` ### `@psalm-external-mutation-free` Used to annotate a class method that does not mutate state externally of the class's scope. ```php s = $s; } /** * @psalm-external-mutation-free */ public function getShortMutating() : string { $this->s .= "hello"; // this is fine return substr($this->s, 0, 5); } /** * @psalm-external-mutation-free */ public function save() : void { file_put_contents("foo.txt", $this->s); // this is a bug } } ``` ### `@psalm-immutable` Used to annotate a class where every property is treated by consumers as `@psalm-readonly` and every instance method is treated as `@psalm-mutation-free`. ```php baz = $baz; } public function bar(): int { return 0; } } $anonymous = new /** @psalm-immutable */ class extends Foo { public string $baz = "B"; public function bar(): int { return 1; } }; ``` ### `@psalm-pure` Used to annotate a [pure function](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pure_function) - one whose output is just a function of its input. ```php count++; } } $counter = new Counter(); echo $counter->count; // outputs 0 $counter->increment(); // Method can mutate property echo $counter->count; // outputs 1 $counter->count = 5; // This will fail, as it's mutating a property directly ``` ### `@psalm-readonly-allow-private-mutation` This is a shorthand for the property annotations `@readonly` and `@psalm-allow-private-mutation`. ```php count++; } } $counter = new Counter(); echo $counter->count; // outputs 0 $counter->increment(); // Method can mutate property echo $counter->count; // outputs 1 $counter->count = 5; // This will fail, as it's mutating a property directly ``` ### `@psalm-trace` You can use this annotation to trace inferred type (applied to the *next* statement). ```php