In PHP 7.1 when the following function is called:
private function doStuff(?int $limit = 999) { }
with syntax like so:
doStuff(null);
the value of $limit
becomes null
. So I guess it can be said that the value of $limit
was explicitly set to null
.
Is there any way to overcome this? I.e. when a null value (i.e. the lack of a value) is encountered use the default, whether it is implicit or explicit?
No PHP doesn't have a "fallback to default if null" option. You should instead do:
private function dostuff(?int $limit = null) {
// pre-int typehinting I would have done is_numeric($limit) ? $limit : 999;
$limit = $limit ?? 999;
}
Alternatively make sure you either do dostuff()
or dostuff(999)
when you don't have a sensible value for doing stuff.
Note: There's also reflection to get the default values of method parameters but that seems a too much.
However here's how:
$m = new ReflectionFunction('dostuff');
$default = $m->getParameters()[0]->getDefaultValue();
dostuff($default);