Coding Guidelines
Do your best to follow these guidelines when writing code for Craft and Craft plugins.
#Code Style
- Follow the PSR-1 (opens new window) & PSR-2 (opens new window) coding standards.
 - Use the short array syntax (
['foo' => 'bar']). - Don’t fret too much over line lengths. Focus on readability.
 - Chained method calls should each be placed on their own line, with the 
->operator at the beginning of each line. - Conditions that span multiple lines should have logical operators (
||,&&, etc.) at the end of lines. - Strings that are concatenated across multiple lines should have the 
.operator at the ends of lines. - Don’t put a space after type typecasts (
(int)$foo). - Don’t wrap 
include/include_once/require/require_oncefile paths in parentheses. They are not functions. 
Craft’s PhpStorm settings repository includes a code style scheme and inspection profile: https://github.com/craftcms/phpstorm-settings (opens new window)
The Craft Autocomplete package provides Twig template autocompletion in PhpStorm for Craft and plugin/module variables and element types: https://github.com/nystudio107/craft-autocomplete (opens new window)
#Best Practices
Declare method argument types whenever possible.
public function foo(Entry $entry, array $settings)Use strict comparison operators (
===and!==) whenever possible.Use
$foo === null/$bar !== nullrather thanis_null($foo)/!is_null($bar).Use
(int)$foo/(float)$barrather thanintval($foo)/floatval($bar).Always pass
true/falseto the third argument of in_array() (opens new window) to indicate whether the check should be type-strict (and make ittruewhenever possible).Use
$obj->property !== nullrather thanisset($obj->property)in conditions that check if an object property is set.Use
empty()/!empty()in conditions that check if an array is/isn’t empty.Refer to class names using the ::class (opens new window) keyword (
Foo::class) rather than as a string ('some\nmspace\Foo') or yii\base\BaseObject::className() (opens new window).Initialize arrays explicitly (
$array = []) rather than implicitly (e.g.$array[] = 'foo'where$arraywasn’t defined yet).Use
self::_foo()rather thanstatic::_foo()when calling private static functions, sincestatic::would break if the class is extended.Use
self::CONSTANTrather thanstatic::CONSTANT(unnecessary overhead).Only use the
parent::keyword when calling a parent method with the exact same name as the current method. Otherwise use$this->.Always specify the visibility of class properties and methods (
public,protected, orprivate).Private class property/method names should begin with an underscore (
private $_foo).Don’t explicitly set class properties’ default values to
null(e.g.public $foo = null;).Always use
requireorincludewhen including a file that returns something, rather thanrequire_onceorinclude_once.Use
strpos($foo, $bar) === 0rather thanstrncmp($foo, $bar, $barLength) === 0when checking if one string begins with another string, for short strings.Use
$str === ''rather thanstrlen($str) === 0when checking if a string is empty.Avoid using
array_merge()within loops when possible.Unset variables created by reference in foreach-loops after the loop is finished.
foreach ($array as &$value) { // ... } unset($value);Use
implode()rather thanjoin().Use
in_array()rather thanarray_search(...) !== falsewhen the position of the needle isn’t needed.Don’t use a
switchstatement when a singleifcondition will suffice.Use single quotes (
') whenever double quotes (") aren’t needed.Use shortcut operators (
+=,-=,*=,/=,%=,.=, etc.) whenever possible.Use shortcut regular expression patterns (
\d,\D,\w,\W, etc.) whenever possible.Use the
DIRECTORY_SEPARATORconstant rather than'/'when defining file paths.
The Php Inspections (EA Extended) (opens new window) PhpStorm plugin can help you locate and fix these sorts of best practice issues.
#Namespaces & Class Names
- Follow the PSR-4 (opens new window) specification, where a class’s file location can be inferred by its fully qualified name, given a known base namespace mapped to a base path.
 - Namespaces should be all-lowercase.
 - Class names should be 
StudlyCase. - Only first party code should use the 
craft\andpixelandtonic\namespace roots. Third party plugins should use a namespace root that refers to the vendor name and plugin name (e.g.acme\myplugin\). 
#Method Names
Getter methods (methods whose primary responsibility is to return something, rather than do something) that don’t accept any arguments should begin with get , and there should be a corresponding @property tag in the class’s docblock to document the corresponding magic getter property.
getAuthor()getIsSystemOn()getHasFreshContent()
Getter methods that accept one or more arguments (regardless of whether they can be omitted) should only begin with get if it “sounds right”.
getError($attribute)hasErrors($attribute = null)
Static methods should generally not start with get.
className()displayName()
#Type Declarations
Use type declarations (opens new window) whenever possible. The only exceptions should be:
- Magic methods (opens new window) (e.g. 
__toString()) - Arguments/return statements that could be multiple non-
nullvalue types - Methods that override a parent class’s method, where the parent method doesn’t have type declarations
 - Methods that are required by an interface, and the interface method doesn’t have type declarations
 
If an argument accepts two types and one of them is null, a ? can be placed before the non-null type:
public function foo(?string $bar): void
#Docblocks
- Methods that override subclass methods or implement an interface method, and don’t have anything relevant to add to the docblock, should only have 
@inheritdocin the docblock. - Use full sentences with proper capitalization, grammar, and punctuation in docblock descriptions.
 @paramand@returntags should not have proper capitalization or punctuation.- Use 
boolandintinstead ofbooleanandintegerin type declarations. - Specify array members’ class names in array type declarations when it makes sense (
ElementInterface[]rather thanarray). - Chainable functions that return an instance of the current class should use 
staticas the return type declaration. - Functions that don’t ever return anything should have 
@return void. 
#Interfaces vs. Implementation Classes
@param , @return , @var , @method and @property tags on public service methods should reference Interfaces (when applicable), not their implementation class:
// Bad:
/**
 * @param \craft\base\Element $element
 * @param \craft\base\ElementInterface|\craft\base\Element $element
 */
// Better:
/**
 * @param \craft\base\ElementInterface $element
 */
Inline @var tags should reference implementation classes, not their interfaces:
// Bad:
/** @var \craft\base\ElementInterface $element */
/** @var \craft\base\ElementInterface|\craft\base\Element $element */
// Better:
/** @var \craft\base\Element $element */
#Control Flow
#Happy Paths
Use them (opens new window). In general the execution of a method should only make it all the way to the end if everything went as expected.
// Bad:
if ($condition) {
    // Do stuff
    return true;
}
return false;
// Better:
if (!$condition) {
    return false;
}
// Do stuff
return true;
#if…return…else
 Don’t do this. There’s no point, and can be misleading at first glance.
// Bad:
if ($condition) {
    return $foo;
} else {
    return $bar;
}
// Better:
if ($condition) {
    return $foo;
}
return $bar;
#Controllers
#Return Types
Controller actions that should complete the request must return either a string (HTML) or a Response object.
// Bad:
$this->asJson($obj);
$this->renderTemplate($template, $variables);
// Better:
return $this->asJson($obj);
return $this->renderTemplate($template, $variables);
#JSON Actions
Controller actions that have the option of returning JSON should do so if the request explicitly accepts a JSON response; not if it’s an Ajax request.
// Bad:
if (\Craft::$app->getRequest()->getIsAjax()) {
    return $this->asJson([...]);
}
// Better:
if (\Craft::$app->getRequest()->getAcceptsJson()) {
    return $this->asJson([...]);
}
Controller actions that only return JSON should require that the request accepts JSON.
$this->requireAcceptsJson();
#Exceptions
- If an exception is likely to occur as a result of user error, use the yii\base\UserException (opens new window) class (or a subclass)
 - Only translate exception messages with Craft::t() (opens new window) if it’s a yii\base\UserException (opens new window).
 
#DB Queries
- Always wrap a table name with 
{{%and}}(e.g.{{%entries}}) so it’s properly quoted and the table prefix gets inserted. - Use the 
['col1', 'col2']syntax withselect()andgroupBy()instead of'col1, col2'even if you’re only referencing a single column. - Use the 
['{{%tablename}}']syntax withfrom()instead of'{{%tablename}}'. - Use the 
['col1' => SORT_ASC, 'col2' => SORT_DESC]syntax withorderBy()instead of'col1, col2 desc'. 
#Conditions
- Always use Yii’s declarative condition syntax (opens new window) when possible, as it will automatically quote table/column names and values for you.
 - For consistency, use:
['col' => $values]instead of['in', 'col', $values]['col' => $value]instead of['=', 'col', $value]['like', 'col', 'value']instead of['like', 'col', '%value%', false](unless the%is only needed on one side ofvalue)
 - If searching for 
NULL, use the['col' => null]syntax. - If searching for 
NOT NULL, use the['not', ['col' => null]]syntax. - If you cannot use the declarative condition syntax (e.g. the condition is referencing another table/column name rather than a value, as is often the case with joins), make sure you’ve quoted all column names, and any values that you aren’t 100% confident are safe should be added as query params.
 
// Bad:
$query->where('foo.thing is null');
$query->innerJoin('{{%bar}} bar', 'bar.fooId = foo.id');
// Better:
$query->where(['foo.thing' => null]);
$query->innerJoin('{{%bar}} bar', '[[bar.fooId]] = [[foo.id]]');
#Getters & Setters
Getter and setter methods should have a corresponding @property tag in the class’s docblock, so IDEs like PhpStorm can be aware of the magic properties.
/**
 * @property User $author
 */
class Entry
{
    private $_author;
    /**
     * @return User
     */
    public function getAuthor()
    {
        return $this->_author;
    }
}
For a slight performance improvement and easier debugging, you should generally stick with calling the getter and setter methods directly rather than going through their magic properties.
// Bad:
$oldAuthor = $entry->author;
$entry->author = $newAuthor;
// Better:
$oldAuthor = $entry->getAuthor();
$entry->setAuthor($newAuthor);
#App Component Getters
App components should have their own getter functions, which call the app component getter method get() (opens new window) directly:
/**
 * @return Entries
 */
public function getEntries()
{
    return $this->get('entries');
}
And you should use those instead of their magic properties:
// Bad:
\Craft::$app->entries->saveEntry($entry);
// Better:
\Craft::$app->getEntries()->saveEntry($entry);
If you will be referencing the same app component multiple times within the same method, save a local reference to it.
// Bad:
\Craft::$app->getEntries()->saveEntry($entry1);
\Craft::$app->getEntries()->saveEntry($entry2);
// Better:
$entriesService = \Craft::$app->getEntries();
$entriesService->saveEntry($entry1);
$entriesService->saveEntry($entry2);