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PHP RFC: Records
- Version: 0.9
- Date: 2024-07-19
- Author: Robert Landers, landers.robert@gmail.com
- Status: Draft (or Under Discussion or Accepted or Declined)
- First Published at: http://wiki.php.net/rfc/records
Introduction
In modern PHP development, the need for concise and immutable data structures is increasingly recognized. Inspired by the concept of “records”, “data objects”, or “structs” in other languages, this RFC proposes the addition of record
objects in PHP. These records will provide a concise and immutable data structure, distinct from readonly
classes, enabling developers to define immutable objects with less boilerplate code.
Proposal
This RFC proposes the introduction of a new record keyword in PHP to define immutable data objects. These objects will allow properties to be initialized concisely and will provide built-in methods for common operations such as modifying properties and equality checks using a function-like instantiation syntax. Records can implement interfaces and use traits but cannot extend other records or classes.
Syntax and semantics
Definition
A record
is defined by the word “record”, followed by the name of its type, an open parenthesis containing zero or more typed parameters that become public, immutable, properties. They may optionally implement an interface using the implements
keyword.
A record
may NOT contain a constructor; instead of defining initial values, property hooks should be used to produce computable values on-demand. Defining a constructor emits a compilation error.
A record
body may contain property hooks, methods, and use traits. Regular properties may also be defined, but they are immutable by default and are no different than const
.
Static properties and methods are forbidden in a record
(this includes const
, a regular property may be used instead). Attempting to define static properties, methods or compilation error.
namespace Geometry; interface Shape { public function area(): float; } trait Dimension { public function dimensions(): array { return [$this->width, $this->height]; } } record Vector2(int $x, int $y); record Rectangle(Vector2 $leftTop, Vector2 $rightBottom) implements Shape { use Dimension; public int $height = 1; // this will always and forever be "1", it is immutable. public int $width { get => $this->rightBottom->x - $this->topLeft->x; } public int $height { get => $this->rightBottom->y - $this->topLeft->y; } public function area(): float { return $this->width * $this->height; } }
Usage
A record
may be used as a readonly class
, as the behavior of it is very similar with no key differences to assist in migration from readonly class
.
$rect1 = Rectangle(Point(0, 0), Point(1, -1)); $rect2 = $rect1->with(topLeft: Point(0, 1)); var_dump($rect2->dimensions());
Optional parameters and default values
A record
can also be defined with optional parameters that are set if left out during instantiation.
record Rectangle(int $x, int $y = 10); var_dump(Rectangle(10)); // output a record with x: 10 and y: 10
Auto-generated ''with'' method
To enhance the usability of records, the RFC proposes automatically generating a with
method for each record. This method allows for partial updates of properties, creating a new instance of the record with the specified properties updated.
The auto-generated with
method accepts only named arguments defined in the constructor. No other property names can be used, and it returns a new record object with the given values.
$point1 = Point(3, 4); $point2 = $point1->with(x: 5); $point3 = $point1->with(null, 10); // must use named arguments echo $point1->x; // Outputs: 3 echo $point2->x; // Outputs: 5
A developer may define their own with
method if they so choose. This is similar to overriding a __construct
method in a regular class definition.
Performance considerations
To ensure that records are both performant and memory-efficient, the RFC proposes leveraging PHP's copy-on-write (COW) semantics (similar to arrays) and interning values. Unlike interned strings, the garbage collector will be allowed to clean up these interned records when they are no longer needed.
$point1 = Point(3, 4); $point2 = $point1; // No data duplication, $point2 references the same data as $point1 $point3 = Point(3, 4); // No data duplication here either, it is pointing the the same memory as $point1 $point4 = $point1->with(x: 5); // Data duplication occurs here, creating a new instance with modified data
Cloning and with()
Calling clone
on a record
results in the exact same record object being returned. As it is a “value” object, it represents a value and is the same thing as saying clone 3
—you expect to get back a 3
.
with
may be called with no arguments, and it is the same behavior as clone
. This is an important consideration because a developer may call $new = $record->with(...$array)
and we don't want to crash. If a developer wants to crash, they can do by assert($new !== $record)
.
Equality
A record
is always strongly equal (===
) to another record with the same value in the properties, much like an array
is strongly equal to another array containing the same elements. For all intents, $recordA === $recordB
is the same as $recordA == $recordB
.
Comparison operations will behave exactly like they do for classes.
Reflection
Records in PHP will be fully supported by the reflection API, providing access to their properties and methods just like regular classes. However, immutability and special instantiation rules will be enforced.
ReflectionClass support
ReflectionClass
can be used to inspect records, their properties, and methods. Any attempt to modify record properties via reflection will throw an exception, maintaining immutability. Attempting to create a new instance via ReflectionClass
will cause a ReflectionException
to be thrown.
$point = Point(3, 4); $reflection = new \ReflectionClass($point); foreach ($reflection->getProperties() as $property) { echo $property->getName() . ': ' . $property->getValue($point) . PHP_EOL; }
Immutability enforcement
Attempts to modify record properties via reflection will throw an exception.
try { $property = $reflection->getProperty('x'); $property->setValue($point, 10); // This will throw an exception } catch (\ReflectionException $e) { echo 'Exception: ' . $e->getMessage() . PHP_EOL; // "Cannot modify a record property" }
ReflectionFunction for implicit constructor
Using ReflectionFunction
on a record will reflect the implicit constructor.
$constructor = new \ReflectionFunction('Geometry\Point'); echo 'Constructor Parameters: '; foreach ($constructor->getParameters() as $param) { echo $param->getName() . ' '; }
New functions and methods
- Calling
is_object($record)
will returntrue
. - A new function,
is_record($record)
, will returntrue
for records, andfalse
otherwise - Calling
get_class($record)
will return the record name
var_dump
Calling var_dump
will look much like it does for objects, but instead of object
it will say record
.
record(Point)#1 (2) { ["x"]=> int(1) ["y"]=> int(2) }
Considerations for implementations
A record
cannot be named after an existing record
, class
or function
. This is because defining a record
creates both a class
and a function
with the same name.
Backward Incompatible Changes
No backward incompatible changes.
Proposed PHP Version(s)
PHP 8.5
RFC Impact
To SAPIs
N/A
To Existing Extensions
N/A
To Opcache
Unknown.
New Constants
None
php.ini Defaults
None
Open Issues
Todo
Unaffected PHP Functionality
None.
Future Scope
Proposed Voting Choices
Include these so readers know where you are heading and can discuss the proposed voting options.
Patches and Tests
TBD
Implementation
After the project is implemented, this section should contain
- the version(s) it was merged into
- a link to the git commit(s)
- a link to the PHP manual entry for the feature
- a link to the language specification section (if any)
References
Links to external references, discussions or RFCs
Rejected Features
Keep this updated with features that were discussed on the mail lists.