Command-line script to convert and revert PHP's array()
syntax to PHP 5.4's short array syntax[]
using PHP's built-in tokenizer.
By relying on the PHP tokenizer, nothing but the array syntax itself will be altered. The script was successfully tested against code bases with more than 5.000 PHP files.
Usage: php convert.php [-w] <file>
Run the script with the path of the PHP file you wish to convert as argument. This will print the converted source code to STDOUT.
You can add the -w
switch if you want to override the original file with the converted code.
You can add the -p
switch to indicate you are converting a patch file. This will output a file with -array-reroll
added to the original file name.
If you want the script to process PHP files with short open tags (<?
) as well, you need to make sure that the short_open_tag
setting is enabled in your php.ini
file.
In case of any error, an error message is written to STDERR and the script exits with a return code of 1.
Use find
to convert a whole directory recursively (on Linux/Mac):
find <directory> -name "*.php" -exec php "convert.php" -w "{}" \;
Or on Windows (thanks to John Jablonski for suggesting):
FOR /f "tokens=*" %a in ('dir *.php /S/B') DO php convert.php %a -w
In case you don't trust the script yet, you can even perform a syntax check after conversion:
find <directory> -name "*.php" -exec php -l "{}" \; | grep "error:"
Usage: php revert.php [-w] <file>
Reverting has not yet been thoroughly tested, so use with extreme percaution!
Since there is no specific token for the short array syntax, it assumes every "[" is an aray and relies on checking the previous token for a variable, object property, function return ")", nested array "]" and variable reference "}".
Thanks to Lebenslauf.com (German CV editor) for sponsoring the development.