Covariance and Contravariance
In PHP 7.2.0, partial contravariance was introduced by removing type restrictions
on parameters in a child method. As of PHP 7.4.0, full covariance and contravariance
support was added.
Covariance allows a child's method to return a more specific type than the return type
of its parent's method. Contravariance allows a parameter type to be less
specific in a child method, than that of its parent.
A type declaration is considered more specific in the following case:
A type class is considered less specific if the opposite is true.
Covariance
To illustrate how covariance works, a simple abstract parent class, Animal
is created. Animal will be extended by children classes,
Cat, and Dog.
Note that there aren't any methods which return values in this example. A few factories
will be added which return a new object of class type Animal,
Cat, or Dog.
Contravariance
Continuing with the previous example with the classes Animal,
Cat, and Dog, a class called
Food and AnimalFood will be included, and
a method eat(AnimalFood $food) is added to the Animal
abstract class.
In order to see the behavior of contravariance, the
eat method is overridden in the Dog class to allow
any Food type object. The Cat class remains unchanged.
The next example will show the behavior of contravariance.
Property variance
By default, properties are neither covariant nor contravariant, hence invariant.
That is, their type may not change in a child class at all.
The reason for that is "get" operations must be covariant,
and "set" operations must be contravariant.
The only way for a property to satisfy both requirements is to be invariant.
As of PHP 8.4.0, with the addition of abstract properties (on an interface or abstract class) and
virtual properties,
it is possible to declare a property that has only a get or set operation.
As a result, abstract properties or virtual properties that have only a "get" operation required may be covariant.
Similarly, an abstract property or virtual property that has only a "set" operation required may be contravariant.
Once a property has both a get and set operation, however,
it is no longer covariant or contravariant for further extension.
That is, it is now invariant.
Example #1 Property type variance
<?php
class Animal {}
class Dog extends Animal {}
class Poodle extends Dog {}
interface PetOwner
{
// Only a get operation is required, so this may be covariant.
public Animal $pet { get; }
}
class DogOwner implements PetOwner
{
// This may be a more restrictive type since the "get" side
// still returns an Animal. However, as a native property
// children of this class may not change the type anymore.
public Dog $pet;
}
class PoodleOwner extends DogOwner
{
// This is NOT ALLOWED, because DogOwner::$pet has both
// get and set operations defined and required.
public Poodle $pet;
}
?>