Initializing properties in PHP

PHP 7.4 introduced a new feature called "typed properties" which adds the existing PHP type system to class properties. This means that you can now enforce which types a property has without having to encapsulate it in an object.

Typed properties are a very useful feature, however, typed properties without a default value have a new state: uninitialized. And if they're accessed before being initialised, you'll run into a Typed property must not be accessed before initialization error.

So the correct answer to OPs question if you're using PHP 7.4+ is yes, it does matter whether or not you explicitly initialise your class variables and the following two lines are not equivalent any more:

protected int $_foo = null;
protected int $_foo; // The default value in PHP 7.4+ is now uninitialized, not NULL

Further reading (no relation): https://madewithlove.com/typed-property-must-not-be-accessed-before-initialization/


Properties are implicitly initialized to NULL, there is no advantage to do this explicitly.


is omission of a null initialization value completely functionally equivalent to inclusion of a null initialization?

yes

initialization to an empty array seems like similar situation

no. You can try foreach ($this->arr) (or something else) and that variable should be initialized with array to avoid notice.


Yes,

protected $_foo = null;
protected $_foo;

are completely equivalents.
As for me great choise is

  • initialize clearly by null, if it will null by default
  • don't initialize, if it will be overriden in constructor

It helps you to see default values quickly, helps code be self-documenting

Don't initialize array by array() seems to be bad idea because you can't use some function (ex. array_push, array_map)

Tags:

Php