[![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/WordPress-Coding-Standards/WordPress-Coding-Standards.png?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/WordPress-Coding-Standards/WordPress-Coding-Standards) # WordPress Coding Standards for PHP_CodeSniffer This project is a collection of [PHP_CodeSniffer](https://github.com/squizlabs/PHP_CodeSniffer) rules (sniffs) to validate code developed for WordPress. It ensures code quality and adherence to coding conventions, especially the official [WordPress Coding Standards](http://make.wordpress.org/core/handbook/coding-standards/). ## Project history - In April 2009 original project from [Urban Giraffe](http://urbangiraffe.com/articles/wordpress-codesniffer-standard/) was published. - In May 2011 the project was forked on GitHub by [Chris Adams](http://chrisadams.me.uk/). - In April 2012 [XWP](https://xwp.co/) started to dedicate resources to the development and currently maintains the project, along with [J.D. Grimes](https://github.com/JDGrimes) and [Gary Jones](https://github.com/GaryJones). ## Installation ### Composer Standards can be installed with [Composer](https://getcomposer.org/) dependency manager: composer create-project wp-coding-standards/wpcs:dev-master --no-dev Running this command will: 1. Install WordPress standards into `wpcs` directory. 2. Install PHP_CodeSniffer. 3. Register WordPress standards in PHP_CodeSniffer configuration. 4. Make `phpcs` command available from `wpcs/vendor/bin`. For convenience of using `phpcs` as global command you might want to add path to `wpcs/vendor/bin` directory to a `PATH` environment of your operating system. ### Standalone 1. Install PHP_CodeSniffer by following its [installation instructions](https://github.com/squizlabs/PHP_CodeSniffer#installation) (via Composer, PEAR, or Git checkout). Do ensure, if for example you're using [VVV](https://github.com/Varying-Vagrant-Vagrants/VVV), that PHP_CodeSniffer's version matches our requirements (you can check the required version in [composer.json](composer.json#L18)). 2. Clone WordPress standards repository: git clone -b master https://github.com/WordPress-Coding-Standards/WordPress-Coding-Standards.git wpcs 3. Add its path to PHP_CodeSniffer configuration: phpcs --config-set installed_paths /path/to/wpcs To summarize: ```bash cd ~/projects git clone https://github.com/squizlabs/PHP_CodeSniffer.git phpcs git clone -b master https://github.com/WordPress-Coding-Standards/WordPress-Coding-Standards.git wpcs cd phpcs ./scripts/phpcs --config-set installed_paths ../wpcs ``` And then add the `~/projects/phpcs/scripts` directory to your `PATH` environment variable via your `.bashrc`. You should then see `WordPress-Core` et al listed when you run `phpcs -i`. ## How to use ### Command line Run the `phpcs` command line tool on a given file or directory, for example: phpcs --standard=WordPress wp-load.php Will result in following output: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FOUND 13 ERROR(S) AFFECTING 7 LINE(S) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | ERROR | End of line character is invalid; expected "\n" but found "\r\n" 22 | ERROR | No space after opening parenthesis of function prohibited 22 | ERROR | No space before closing parenthesis of function prohibited 26 | ERROR | No space before closing parenthesis of function prohibited 31 | ERROR | No space after opening parenthesis of function prohibited 31 | ERROR | No space before closing parenthesis of function prohibited 31 | ERROR | No space after opening parenthesis of function prohibited 31 | ERROR | No space before closing parenthesis of function prohibited 34 | ERROR | No space after opening parenthesis of function prohibited 34 | ERROR | No space before closing parenthesis of function prohibited 55 | ERROR | Detected usage of a non-validated input variable: $_SERVER 55 | ERROR | Detected usage of a non-sanitized input variable: $_SERVER 70 | ERROR | String "Create a Configuration File" does not require double | | quotes; use single quotes instead -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ### PhpStorm Please see “[PHP Code Sniffer with WordPress Coding Standards Integration](https://www.jetbrains.com/phpstorm/help/using-php-code-sniffer-tool.html)” in PhpStorm documentation. ### Sublime Text Install the [sublime-phpcs package](https://github.com/benmatselby/sublime-phpcs), then use the "Switch coding standard" command in the Command Palette to switch between coding standards. ### Atom - Install PHP Sniffer and WordPress Coding Standards per above - Install [linter-phpcs](https://atom.io/packages/linter-phpcs) via Atom's package manager - Run `which phpcs` to get your `phpcs` executable path - Enter your `phpcs` executable path and one of the coding standards specified above (e.g. `WordPress`, `WordPress-VIP`, etc.) ![Atom Linter WordPress Coding Standards configuration](https://cloud.githubusercontent.com/assets/224636/12740504/ce4e97b8-c941-11e5-8d83-c77a2470d58e.png) ![Atom Linter in action using WordPress Coding Standards](https://cloud.githubusercontent.com/assets/224636/12740542/131c5894-c942-11e5-9e31-5e020c993224.png) ## Standards subsets The project encompasses a super–set of the sniffs that the WordPress community may need. If you use the `WordPress` standard you will get all the checks. Some of them might be unnecessary for your environment, for example those specific to WordPress VIP coding requirements. You can use the following as standard names when invoking `phpcs` to select sniffs, fitting your needs: - `WordPress` — complete set with all of the sniffs in the project - `WordPress-Core` — main ruleset for [WordPress core coding standards](http://make.wordpress.org/core/handbook/coding-standards/) - `WordPress-Docs` — additional ruleset for inline documentation - `WordPress-Extra` — extended ruleset for optional best practices sniffs - includes `WordPress-Core` - `WordPress-VIP` — extended ruleset for [WordPress VIP coding requirements](http://vip.wordpress.com/documentation/code-review-what-we-look-for/) - includes `WordPress-Core` ### Using custom ruleset If you need to further customize selection of sniffs for your project — you can create custom `ruleset.xml` standard. See provided [project.ruleset.xml.example](project.ruleset.xml.example) file and [fully annotated example](https://github.com/squizlabs/PHP_CodeSniffer/wiki/Annotated-ruleset.xml) in PHP_CodeSniffer documentation. ## Contributing See [CONTRIBUTING](CONTRIBUTING.md), including information about [unit testing](CONTRIBUTING.md#unit-testing). ## License See [LICENSE](LICENSE) (MIT).