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128 lines
2.2 KiB
Markdown
128 lines
2.2 KiB
Markdown
# Assertion syntax
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Psalm’s [assertion annotation](adding_assertions.md) supports a number of different assertions.
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Psalm assertions are of the form
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`@psalm-assert(-if-true|-if-false)? (Assertion) (Variable or Property)`
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`Assertion` here can have many forms:
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## Regular assertions
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### is_xxx assertions
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Most `is_xxx` PHP functions have companion assertions e.g. `int` for `is_int`. Here's the full list:
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- `int`
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- `float`
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- `string`
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- `bool`
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- `scalar`
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- `callable`
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- `countable`
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- `array`
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- `iterable`
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- `numeric`
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- `resource`
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- `object`
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- `null`
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So a custom version `is_int` could be annotated in Psalm as
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```php
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<?php
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/** @psalm-assert-if-true int $x */
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function custom_is_int($x) {
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return is_int($x);
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}
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```
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### Object type assertions
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Any class can be used as an assertion e.g.
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`@psalm-assert SomeObjectType $foo`
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### Generic assertions
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Generic type parameters can also now be asserted e.g.
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`@psalm-assert array<int, string> $foo`
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## Negated assertions
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Any assertion above can be negated:
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This asserts that `$foo` is not an `int`:
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```php
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<?php
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/** @psalm-assert !int $foo */
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```
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This asserts that `$bar` is not an object of type `SomeObjectType`:
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```php
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<?php
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/** @psalm-assert !SomeObjectType $bar */
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```
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## Bool assertions
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This asserts that `$bar` is `true`:
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```php
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<?php
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/** @psalm-assert true $bar */
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```
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This asserts that `$bar` is not `false`:
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```php
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<?php
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/** @psalm-assert !false $bar */
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```
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## Equality assertions
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Psalm also supports the equivalent of `assert($some_int === $other_int)` in the form
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```php
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<?php
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/** @psalm-assert =int $some_int */
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```
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There are two differences between the above assertion and
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```php
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<?php
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/** @psalm-assert int $some_int */
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```
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Firstly, the negation of `=int` has no meaning:
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```php
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<?php
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/** @psalm-assert-if-true =int $x */
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function equalsFive($x) {
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return is_int($x) && $x === 5;
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}
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function foo($y) : void {
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if (equalsFive($y)) {
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// $y is definitely an int
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} else {
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// $y might be an int, but it might not
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}
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}
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function bar($y) : void {
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if (is_int($y)) {
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// $y is definitely an int
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} else {
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// $y is definitely not an int
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}
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}
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```
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Secondly, calling `equalsFive($some_int)` is not a `RedundantCondition` in Psalm, whereas calling `is_int($some_int)` is.
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