If you need to enforce some specific code style rules, you can implement your own fixers.
For each rule you want to add, create a class that implements
PhpCsFixer\Fixer\FixerInterface.
Note that there is a specific constraint
regarding custom rules names: they must match the pattern
/^[A-Z][a-zA-Z0-9]*\/[a-z][a-z0-9_]*$/
.
Then register your custom fixers and enable them in the config file:
<?php
// ...
return (new PhpCsFixer\Config())
// ...
->registerCustomFixers([
new CustomerFixer1(),
new CustomerFixer2(),
])
->setRules([
// ...
'YourVendorName/custome_rule' => true,
'YourVendorName/custome_rule_2' => true,
])
;
There are several interfaces that your fixers can also implement if needed:
- PhpCsFixer\Fixer\WhitespacesAwareFixerInterface: for fixers that need to know the configured indentation and line endings;
- PhpCsFixer\Fixer\ConfigurableFixerInterface: to create a configurable fixer;
- PhpCsFixer\Fixer\DeprecatedFixerInterface: to deprecate a fixer.