This adds an Option type for PHP.
The Option type is intended for cases where you sometimes might return a value (typically an object), and sometimes you might return no value (typically null) depending on arguments, or other runtime factors.
Often times, you forget to handle the case where no value is returned. Not intentionally of course, but maybe you did not account for all possible states of the system; or maybe you indeed covered all cases, then time goes on, code is refactored, some of these your checks might become invalid, or incomplete. Suddenly, without noticing, the no value case is not handled anymore. As a result, you might sometimes get fatal PHP errors telling you that you called a method on a non-object; users might see blank pages, or worse.
On one hand, the Option type forces a developer to consciously think about both cases (returning a value, or returning no value). That in itself will already make your code more robust. On the other hand, the Option type also allows the API developer to provide more concise API methods, and empowers the API user in how he consumes these methods.
Installation is super-easy via composer
composer require phpoption/phpoption
or add it to your composer.json file.
class MyRepository
{
public function findSomeEntity($criteria)
{
if (null !== $entity = $this->em->find(...)) {
return new \PhpOption\Some($entity);
}
// We use a singleton, for the None case.
return \PhpOption\None::create();
}
}
If you are consuming an existing library, you can also use a shorter version
which by default treats null
as None
, and everything else as Some
case:
class MyRepository
{
public function findSomeEntity($criteria)
{
return \PhpOption\Option::fromValue($this->em->find(...));
// or, if you want to change the none value to false for example:
return \PhpOption\Option::fromValue($this->em->find(...), false);
}
}
$entity = $repo->findSomeEntity(...)->get(); // returns entity, or throws exception
$entity = $repo->findSomeEntity(...)->getOrElse(new Entity());
// Or, if you want to lazily create the entity.
$entity = $repo->findSomeEntity(...)->getOrCall(function() {
return new Entity();
});
// Before
if (null === $entity = $this->findSomeEntity()) {
throw new NotFoundException();
}
echo $entity->name;
// After
echo $this->findSomeEntity()->get()->name;
// Before
try {
$entity = $this->findSomeEntity();
} catch (NotFoundException $ex) {
$entity = new Entity();
}
// After
$entity = $this->findSomeEntity()->getOrElse(new Entity());
// Before
$entity = $this->findSomeEntity();
if (null === $entity) {
return new Entity();
}
return $entity;
// After
return $this->findSomeEntity()->getOrElse(new Entity());
If you'd like to try multiple alternatives, the orElse
method allows you to
do this very elegantly:
return $this->findSomeEntity()
->orElse($this->findSomeOtherEntity())
->orElse($this->createEntity());
The first option which is non-empty will be returned. This is especially useful with lazy-evaluated options, see below.
The above example has the flaw that we would need to evaluate all options when the method is called which creates unnecessary overhead if the first option is already non-empty.
Fortunately, we can easily solve this by using the LazyOption
class:
return $this->findSomeEntity()
->orElse(new LazyOption(array($this, 'findSomeOtherEntity')))
->orElse(new LazyOption(array($this, 'createEntity')));
This way, only the options that are necessary will actually be evaluated.
Of course, performance is important. Attached is a performance benchmark which you can run on a machine of your choosing.
The overhead incurred by the Option type comes down to the time that it takes to create one object, our wrapper. Also, we need to perform one additional method call to retrieve the value from the wrapper.
- Overhead: Creation of 1 Object, and 1 Method Call
- Average Overhead per Invocation (some case/value returned): 0.000000761s (that is 761 nano seconds)
- Average Overhead per Invocation (none case/null returned): 0.000000368s (that is 368 nano seconds)
The benchmark was run under Ubuntu precise with PHP 5.4.6. As you can see the overhead is surprisingly low, almost negligible.
So in conclusion, unless you plan to call a method thousands of times during a
request, there is no reason to stick to the object|null
return value; better give
your code some options!