"value":"\n <p>For some time, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.drupal.org\/docs\/develop\/standards\/php\/php-coding-standards#s-functions-and-variables\">Drupal's PHP coding standards<\/a> allows for writing variables in either snake-case (e.g. <code>$my_variable<\/code>) or lower camel-case (<code>e.g. $myVariable<\/code>).<\/p>\n\n<p>It originally only allowed for snake-case variable names but once it accepted both, I switched to camel-case as my default.<\/p>\n\n<p>Why? I didn't like the inconsistency of using one approach for variable names and one for method and property names in PHP classes (which were always camel-case).<\/p>\n\n<p>I'd have had code like this with a mixture of both:<\/p>\n\n<pre><code class=\"language-php\">class MyClass {\n\n private EntityTypeManagerInterface $entityTypeManager;\n\n public function __construct(EntityTypeManagerInterface $entity_type_manager) {\n $this->entityTypeManager = $entity_type_manager;\n }\n\n}\n<\/code><\/pre>\n\n<p>Or even more simply:<\/p>\n\n<pre><code class=\"language-php\">$entity_type_manager = \\Drupal::entityTypeManager();\n<\/code><\/pre>\n\n<p>I prefer not to have to consistently think about which to use and, if possible, like to use standard approaches in different codebases whether I'm working on a Drupal project, a Symfony project, or a PHP library.<\/p>\n\n<p>Plus, I get to use new PHP features like <a href=\"/daily\/2023\/04\/12\/cleaner-php-code-with-promoted-constructor-properties\">promoted constructor properties<\/a> if everything is named in the same format.<\/p>\n\n ",
"processed":"\n <p>For some time, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.drupal.org\/docs\/develop\/standards\/php\/php-coding-standards#s-functions-and-variables\">Drupal's PHP coding standards<\/a> allows for writing variables in either snake-case (e.g. <code>$my_variable<\/code>) or lower camel-case (<code>e.g. $myVariable<\/code>).<\/p>\n\n<p>It originally only allowed for snake-case variable names but once it accepted both, I switched to camel-case as my default.<\/p>\n\n<p>Why? I didn't like the inconsistency of using one approach for variable names and one for method and property names in PHP classes (which were always camel-case).<\/p>\n\n<p>I'd have had code like this with a mixture of both:<\/p>\n\n<pre><code class=\"language-php\">class MyClass {\n\n private EntityTypeManagerInterface $entityTypeManager;\n\n public function __construct(EntityTypeManagerInterface $entity_type_manager) {\n $this->entityTypeManager = $entity_type_manager;\n }\n\n}\n<\/code><\/pre>\n\n<p>Or even more simply:<\/p>\n\n<pre><code class=\"language-php\">$entity_type_manager = \\Drupal::entityTypeManager();\n<\/code><\/pre>\n\n<p>I prefer not to have to consistently think about which to use and, if possible, like to use standard approaches in different codebases whether I'm working on a Drupal project, a Symfony project, or a PHP library.<\/p>\n\n<p>Plus, I get to use new PHP features like <a href=\"/daily\/2023\/04\/12\/cleaner-php-code-with-promoted-constructor-properties\">promoted constructor properties<\/a> if everything is named in the same format.<\/p>\n\n ",