Camelot tries to adhere a coding style based on PSR-2 and the Symfony2 coding standard.
To use run:
composer require camleot/codingstyle --dev
Add a global
before require
if you want to install it globally.
If installing globally you also need to configure the installed_paths
:
phpcs --config-set installed_paths "$(composer config --global data-dir)"
Then create a CodeSniffer config file named phpcs.xml.dist
in your project root:
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<ruleset>
<!-- Add color to output...umm duh -->
<arg name="colors"/>
<!-- Files or folders to sniff -->
<file>src</file>
<file>tests</file>
<!-- Path to our coding standard folder -->
<rule ref="vendor/camelot/codingstyle/Camelot"/>
</ruleset>
Additional changes can be made here. See CodeSniffer's annotated ruleset for more information.
phpcs.xml.dist
should be committed for all developers to use.
An phpcs.xml
file can also be create which takes precedence over phpcs.xml.dist
for local
changes. This file should be ignored from git.
To use run:
composer require camelot/codingstyle --dev
Add a global
before require
if you want to install it globally.
Then create a config file named .php_cs.dist
in your project root:
<?php
return Camelot\CsFixer\Config::create()
// addRules() accepts arrays and traversable objects.
->addRules(
// Create Camelot's standard rules.
Camelot\CsFixer\Rules::create()
// Enable risky rules.
->risky()
// Enable PHP 5.6, 7.0, and 7.1 rules. Methods exist for each version.
//->php71()
)
// Modify existing rules or add new ones.
->addRules([
'heredoc_to_nowdoc' => false,
'mb_str_functions' => true,
])
// Add directories to scan.
->in('src', 'tests')
;
See their website for a list of rules and additional configuration options.
.php_cs.dist
should be committed for all developers to use.
An .php_cs
file can also be create which takes precedence over .php_cs.dist
for local
changes. This file should be ignored from git.
There's no explicitly written style yet, but when creating the files needed for Camelot using the grunt toolchain there's a target linting the javascript code.