Callable types
Psalm supports a special format for callables of the form. It can also be used for annotating Closure.
callable(Type1, OptionalType2=, SpreadType3...):ReturnType
Adding = after the type implies it is optional, and suffixing with ... implies the use of the spread operator.
Using this annotation you can specify that a given function return a Closure e.g.
<?php
/**
* @return Closure(bool):int
*/
function delayedAdd(int $x, int $y) : Closure {
return function(bool $debug) use ($x, $y) {
if ($debug) echo "got here" . PHP_EOL;
return $x + $y;
};
}
$adder = delayedAdd(3, 4);
echo $adder(true);
Pure callables
For situations where the callable needs to be pure or immutable, the subtypes pure-callable and pure-Closure are also available.
This can be useful when the callable is used in a function marked with @psalm-pure or @psalm-mutation-free, for example:
<?php
/** @psalm-immutable */
class intList {
/** @param list<int> $items */
public function __construct(private array $items) {}
/**
* @param pure-callable(int, int): int $callback
* @psalm-mutation-free
*/
public function walk(callable $callback): int {
return array_reduce($this->items, $callback, 0);
}
}
$list = new intList([1,2,3]);
// This is ok, as the callable is pure
echo $list->walk(fn (int $c, int $v): int => $c + $v);
// This will cause an InvalidArgument error, as the closure calls an impure function
echo $list->walk(fn (int $c, int $v): int => $c + random_int(1, $v));