Enums are similar to classes, and share the same namespaces as classes, interfaces, and traits. They are also autoloadable the same way. An Enum defines a new type, which has a fixed, limited number of possible legal values.
<?php
enum Suit
{
case Hearts;
case Diamonds;
case Clubs;
case Spades;
}
?>
This declaration creates a new enumerated type named Suit
, which has
four and only four legal values: Suit::Hearts
, Suit::Diamonds
,
Suit::Clubs
, and Suit::Spades
. Variables may be assigned
to one of those legal values. A function may be type checked against an enumerated type,
in which case only values of that type may be passed.
<?php
function pick_a_card(Suit $suit) { ... }
$val = Suit::Diamonds;
// OK
pick_a_card($val);
// OK
pick_a_card(Suit::Clubs);
// TypeError: pick_a_card(): Argument #1 ($suit) must be of type Suit, string given
pick_a_card('Spades');
?>
An Enumeration may have zero or more case
definitions, with no maximum.
A zero-case enum is syntactically valid, if rather useless.
For Enumeration cases, the same syntax rules apply as to any label in PHP, see Constants.
By default, cases are not intrinsically backed by a scalar value. That is, Suit::Hearts
is not equal to "0"
. Instead, each case is backed by a singleton object of that name. That means that:
<?php
$a = Suit::Spades;
$b = Suit::Spades;
$a === $b; // true
$a instanceof Suit; // true
?>
It also means that enum values are never <
or >
each other,
since those comparisons are not meaningful on objects. Those comparisons will always return
false when working with enum values.
This type of case, with no related data, is called a "Pure Case." An Enum that contains only Pure Cases is called a Pure Enum.
All Pure Cases are implemented as instances of their enum type. The enum type is represented internally as a class.
All Cases have a read-only property, name
, that is the case-sensitive name
of the case itself. That may sometimes be useful for debugging purposes.
<?php
print Suit::Spades->name;
// prints "Spades"
?>