This repository provides a base configuration for friendsofphp/php-cs-fixer
, which we use to verify and enforce a single coding standard for PHP code written on Werxe.
Run the following:
composer require --dev werxe/php-cs-fixer-config
Now that the package is installed, create a configuration file called .php_cs
or .php_cs.php
at the root of your project with the following contents:
<?php
// Create a new CS Fixer Finder instance
$finder = PhpCsFixer\Finder::create()->in(__DIR__);
return (new Werxe\PhpCsFixer\Config())
->setFinder($finder)
;
There will be certain situations where you might want to ignore certain files or directories to not be linted.
Luckily, this is quite easy to achieve and all you need to do is to perform some calls on the CS Fixer Finder instance :)
Here's a simple example where we ignore both files and directories:
<?php
// Directories to not scan
$excludeDirs = [
'vendor/',
];
// Files to not scan
$excludeFiles = [
'config/app.php',
];
// Create a new CS Fixer Finder instance
$finder = PhpCsFixer\Finder::create()
->in(__DIR__)
->exclude($excludeDirs)
->ignoreDotFiles(true)
->ignoreVCS(true)
->filter(function (\SplFileInfo $file) use ($excludeFiles) {
return ! in_array($file->getRelativePathName(), $excludeFiles);
})
;
return (new Werxe\PhpCsFixer\Config())
->setFinder($finder)
;
If you would like to also enable coding standards on your tests, you can call the withPHPUnitRules()
method on the Config
class, like so:
<?php
// Create a new CS Fixer Finder instance
$finder = PhpCsFixer\Finder::create()->in(__DIR__);
return (new Werxe\PhpCsFixer\Config())
->setFinder($finder)
->withPHPUnitRules()
;
Thank you for your interest in PHP CS Fixer Config. Here are some of the many ways to contribute.
- Check out our contributing guide
- Look at our code of conduct
If you discover any security related issues, please email [email protected] instead of using the issue tracker.
PHP CS Fixer Config is licenced under the MIT License (MIT). Please see the license file for more information.