Zend Framework Coding Standard for PHP
Overview
Scope
This document provides guidelines for code formatting and documentation to
individuals and teams contributing to Zend Framework. Many developers using Zend
Framework have also found these coding standards useful because their code's style
remains consistent with all Zend Framework code. It is also worth noting that it
requires significant effort to fully specify coding standards.
Note: Sometimes developers consider the establishment of a standard more important
than what that standard actually suggests at the most detailed level of design. The
guidelines in the Zend Framework coding standards capture practices that have worked
well on the ZF project. You may modify these standards or use them as is in
accordance with the terms of our
license
Topics covered in the ZF coding standards include:
PHP File Formatting
Naming Conventions
Coding Style
Inline Documentation
Goals
Coding standards are important in any development project, but they are particularly
important when many developers are working on the same project. Coding standards
help ensure that the code is high quality, has fewer bugs, and can be easily
maintained.
PHP File Formatting
General
For files that contain only PHP code, the closing tag ("?>") is never permitted. It
is not required by PHP, and omitting it prevents the accidental injection of
trailing white space into the response.
IMPORTANT: Inclusion of arbitrary binary data as permitted by
__HALT_COMPILER() is prohibited from PHP files in the Zend Framework
project or files derived from them. Use of this feature is only permitted for some
installation scripts.
Indentation
Indentation should consist of 4 spaces. Tabs are not allowed.
Maximum Line Length
The target line length is 80 characters. That is to say, ZF developers should strive
keep each line of their code under 80 characters where possible and practical.
However, longer lines are acceptable in some circumstances. The maximum length of
any line of PHP code is 120 characters.
Line Termination
Line termination follows the Unix text file convention. Lines must end with a
single linefeed (LF) character. Linefeed characters are represented as ordinal 10,
or hexadecimal 0x0A.
Note: Do not use carriage returns (CR) as is the convention in Apple OS's (0x0D) or
the carriage return/linefeed combination (CRLF) as is standard for the Windows OS
(0x0D, 0x0A).
Naming Conventions
Classes
Zend Framework standardizes on a class naming convention whereby the names of the
classes directly map to the directories in which they are stored. The root level
directory of the ZF standard library is the "Zend/" directory, whereas
the root level directory of the ZF extras library is the "ZendX/" directory. All
Zend Framework classes are stored hierarchically under these root directories..
Class names may only contain alphanumeric characters. Numbers are permitted
in class names but are discouraged in most cases. Underscores are only permitted in
place of the path separator; the filename "Zend/Db/Table.php" must map to the
class name "Zend_Db_Table".
If a class name is comprised of more than one word, the first letter of each new
word must be capitalized. Successive capitalized letters are not allowed, e.g.
a class "Zend_PDF" is not allowed while "Zend_Pdf" is acceptable.
These conventions define a pseudo-namespace mechanism for Zend Framework. Zend
Framework will adopt the PHP namespace feature when it becomes available and is
feasible for our developers to use in their applications.
See the class names in the standard and extras libraries for examples of this
classname convention. IMPORTANT: Code that must be deployed
alongside ZF libraries but is not part of the standard or extras libraries (e.g.
application code or libraries that are not distributed by Zend) must never start
with "Zend_" or "ZendX_".
Filenames
For all other files, only alphanumeric characters, underscores, and the dash
character ("-") are permitted. Spaces are strictly prohibited.
Any file that contains PHP code should end with the extension ".php", with the
notable exception of view scripts. The following examples show acceptable filenames
for Zend Framework classes:
File names must map to class names as described above.
Functions and Methods
Function names may only contain alphanumeric characters. Underscores are not
permitted. Numbers are permitted in function names but are discouraged in most
cases.
Function names must always start with a lowercase letter. When a function name
consists of more than one word, the first letter of each new word must be
capitalized. This is commonly called "camelCase" formatting.
Verbosity is generally encouraged. Function names should be as verbose as is
practical to fully describe their purpose and behavior.
These are examples of acceptable names for functions:
For object-oriented programming, accessors for instance or static variables should
always be prefixed with "get" or "set". In implementing design patterns, such as the
singleton or factory patterns, the name of the method should contain the pattern
name where practical to more thoroughly describe behavior.
For methods on objects that are declared with the "private" or "protected" modifier,
the first character of the method name must be an underscore. This is the only
acceptable application of an underscore in a method name. Methods declared "public"
should never contain an underscore.
Functions in the global scope (a.k.a "floating functions") are permitted but
discouraged in most cases. Consider wrapping these functions in a static class.
Variables
Variable names may only contain alphanumeric characters. Underscores are not
permitted. Numbers are permitted in variable names but are discouraged in most
cases.
For instance variables that are declared with the "private" or "protected" modifier,
the first character of the variable name must be a single underscore. This is the
only acceptable application of an underscore in a variable name. Member variables
declared "public" should never start with an underscore.
As with function names (see section 3.3) variable names must always start with a
lowercase letter and follow the "camelCaps" capitalization convention.
Verbosity is generally encouraged. Variables should always be as verbose as
practical to describe the data that the developer intends to store in them. Terse
variable names such as "$i" and "$n" are discouraged for all but the smallest loop
contexts. If a loop contains more than 20 lines of code, the index variables should
have more descriptive names.
Constants
Constants may contain both alphanumeric characters and underscores. Numbers are
permitted in constant names.
All letters used in a constant name must be capitalized, while all words in a
constant name must be separated by underscore characters.
For example, EMBED_SUPPRESS_EMBED_EXCEPTION is permitted but
EMBED_SUPPRESSEMBEDEXCEPTION is not.
Constants must be defined as class members with the "const" modifier. Defining
constants in the global scope with the "define" function is permitted but strongly
discouraged.
Coding Style
PHP Code Demarcation
PHP code must always be delimited by the full-form, standard PHP tags:
]]>
Short tags are never allowed. For files containing only PHP code, the closing tag
must always be omitted (See ).
Strings
String Literals
When a string is literal (contains no variable substitutions), the apostrophe or
"single quote" should always be used to demarcate the string:
String Literals Containing Apostrophes
When a literal string itself contains apostrophes, it is permitted to demarcate
the string with quotation marks or "double quotes". This is especially useful
for SQL statements:
This syntax is preferred over escaping apostrophes as it is much easier to read.
Variable Substitution
Variable substitution is permitted using either of these forms:
For consistency, this form is not permitted:
String Concatenation
Strings must be concatenated using the "." operator. A space must always
be added before and after the "." operator to improve readability:
When concatenating strings with the "." operator, it is encouraged to
break the statement into multiple lines to improve readability. In these
cases, each successive line should be padded with white space such that the
"."; operator is aligned under the "=" operator:
Arrays
Numerically Indexed Arrays
Negative numbers are not permitted as indices.
An indexed array may start with any non-negative number, however
all base indices besides 0 are discouraged.
When declaring indexed arrays with the Array function, a trailing
space must be added after each comma delimiter to improve readability:
It is permitted to declare multi-line indexed arrays using the "array"
construct. In this case, each successive line must be padded with spaces such
that beginning of each line is aligned:
Associative Arrays
When declaring associative arrays with the Array construct,
breaking the statement into multiple lines is encouraged. In this case, each
successive line must be padded with white space such that both the keys and the
values are aligned:
'firstValue',
'secondKey' => 'secondValue');
]]>
Classes
Class Declaration
Classes must be named according to Zend Framework's naming conventions.
The brace should always be written on the line underneath the class name.
Every class must have a documentation block that conforms to the PHPDocumentor
standard.
All code in a class must be indented with four spaces.
Only one class is permitted in each PHP file.
Placing additional code in class files is permitted but discouraged.
In such files, two blank lines must separate the class from any additional PHP
code in the class file.
The following is an example of an acceptable class declaration:
Class Member Variables
Member variables must be named according to Zend Framework's variable naming
conventions.
Any variables declared in a class must be listed at the top of the class, above
the declaration of any methods.
The var construct is not permitted. Member variables always declare
their visibility by using one of the private,
protected, or public modifiers. Giving access to
member variables directly by declaring them as public is permitted but
discouraged in favor of accessor methods (set/get).
Functions and Methods
Function and Method Declaration
Functions must be named according to the Zend Framework function naming
conventions.
Methods inside classes must always declare their visibility by using
one of the private, protected,
or public modifiers.
As with classes, the brace should always be written on the line underneath the
function name. Space between the function name and the opening parenthesis for
the arguments is not permitted.
Functions in the global scope are strongly discouraged.
The following is an example of an acceptable function declaration in a class:
NOTE: Pass-by-reference is the only parameter passing
mechanism permitted in a method declaration.
Call-time pass-by-reference is strictly prohibited.
The return value must not be enclosed in parentheses. This can hinder
readability, in additional to breaking code if a method is later changed to
return by reference.
bar);
}
/**
* RIGHT
*/
public function bar()
{
return $this->bar;
}
}
]]>
Function and Method Usage
Function arguments should be separated by a single trailing space after the
comma delimiter. The following is an example of an acceptable invocation of a
function that takes three arguments:
Call-time pass-by-reference is strictly prohibited. See the function
declarations section for the proper way to pass function arguments by-reference.
In passing arrays as arguments to a function, the function call may include the
"array" hint and may be split into multiple lines to improve readability. In
such cases, the normal guidelines for writing arrays still apply:
Control Statements
If/Else/Elseif
Control statements based on the if and elseif
constructs must have a single space before the opening parenthesis of the
conditional and a single space after the closing parenthesis.
Within the conditional statements between the parentheses, operators must be
separated by spaces for readability. Inner parentheses are encouraged to improve
logical grouping for larger conditional expressions.
The opening brace is written on the same line as the conditional statement. The
closing brace is always written on its own line. Any content within the braces
must be indented using four spaces.
For "if" statements that include "elseif" or "else", the formatting conventions
are similar to the "if" construct. The following examples demonstrate proper
formatting for "if" statements with "else" and/or "elseif" constructs:
PHP allows statements to be written without braces in some circumstances. This
coding standard makes no differentiation- all "if", "elseif" or "else"
statements must use braces.
Use of the "elseif" construct is permitted but strongly discouraged in favor of
the "else if" combination.
Switch
Control statements written with the "switch" statement must have a single space
before the opening parenthesis of the conditional statement and after the
closing parenthesis.
All content within the "switch" statement must be indented using four spaces.
Content under each "case" statement must be indented using an additional four
spaces.
The construct default should never be omitted from a
switch statement.
NOTE: It is sometimes useful to write a case
statement which falls through to the next case by not including a
break or return within that case. To distinguish these
cases from bugs, any case statement where break or
return are omitted should contain a comment indicating that the
break was intentionally omitted.
Inline Documentation
Documentation Format
All documentation blocks ("docblocks") must be compatible with the phpDocumentor
format. Describing the phpDocumentor format is beyond the scope of this
document. For more information, visit: http://phpdoc.org/
All class files must contain a "file-level" docblock at the top of each file and
a "class-level" docblock immediately above each class. Examples of such
docblocks can be found below.
Files
Every file that contains PHP code must have a docblock at the top of the file
that contains these phpDocumentor tags at a minimum:
Classes
Every class must have a docblock that contains these phpDocumentor tags at a
minimum:
Functions
Every function, including object methods, must have a docblock that contains at a
minimum:
A description of the function
All of the arguments
All of the possible return values
It is not necessary to use the "@access" tag because the access level is already
known from the "public", "private", or "protected" modifier used to declare the
function.
If a function/method may throw an exception, use @throws for all known exception
classes: