PHP 7.1 or newer (released 2nd December 2016)
You can explicitly declare a variable to be null
with this syntax
function foo(?Type $t) {
}
this will result in
$this->foo(new Type()); // ok
$this->foo(null); // ok
$this->foo(); // error
So, if you want an optional argument you can follow the convention Type $t = null
whereas if you need to make an argument accept both null
and its type, you can follow above example.
You can read more here.
PHP 7.0 or older
You have to add a default value like
function foo(Type $t = null) {
}
That way, you can pass it a null value.
This is documented in the section in the manual about Type Declarations:
The declaration can be made to accept NULL
values if the default value of the parameter is set to NULL
.
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