Extract Field
The Extract Field refactoring lets you declare a new field and initialize it with the selected expression. The original expression is replaced with the usage of the field. The new field is created with the default visibility modifier, which is set on the Code Generation tab of the Code Style. PHP page of the Settings/Preferences dialog (Ctrl+Alt+S).
Place the cursor within a piece of code you want to extract into a field.
Press Ctrl+Alt+F or on the main menu, select
.Select an expression you want introduce as a field. If PhpStorm detects more than one occurrence in your code, it lets you specify which occurrences to replace.
-
Provide the name of the new field and choose where it will be initialized: in its declaration, in the current method, or in the class constructor. When you work with PHPUnit tests, PhpStorm also lets you initialize the field in the
setUp
method. For more details on working with PHPUnit in PhpStorm, see Testing with PHPUnit.
Extracting a field using the dialog box
If the Enable in-place mode checkbox is cleared on the General page of the Settings/Preferences dialog (Ctrl+Alt+S), the Extract Field refactoring is performed by means of the Extract Field Dialog.
In the editor, select the expression or variable to be replaced with a field, or just place the cursor within such an expression or variable declaration.
In the main menu, or the context menu of the selection, choose
, or press Ctrl+Alt+F.-
In the Extract Field Dialog dialog that opens:
Specify the name of the field.
-
Specify where the new field should be initialized by selecting the necessary option under Initialize in. When you work with PHPUnit tests, PhpStorm also lets you initialize the field in the
setUp
method. For more details on working with PHPUnit in PhpStorm, see Testing with PHPUnit. In the Visibility area, select the visibility scope for the new field.
To replace all the occurrences of the selected expression (if the selected expression is found more than once in the class), select the Replace all occurrences checkbox.
Click OK.
Example
Let's extract the 'param_query'
argument into a $query
class field. As a result, PhpStorm declares the new public $query
field and changes all 'param_query'
occurrences to self::$query
. The resulting code will look as follows depending on where you've chosen to initialize the field:
Before | After |
---|---|
public function find($params)
{
return execute($params['param_query']);
}
public function findAll($params)
{
return executeAll($params['param_query']);
} |
public $query = 'param_query';
public function find($params)
{
return execute($params[self::$query]);
}
public function findAll($params)
{
return executeAll($params[self::$query]);
} |
Before | After |
---|---|
public function find($params)
{
return execute($params['param_query']);
}
public function findAll($params)
{
return executeAll($params['param_query']);
} |
public $query;
public function find($params)
{
self::$query = 'param_query';
return execute($params[self::$query]);
}
public function findAll($params)
{
return executeAll($params[self::$query]);
} |
Before | After |
---|---|
public function find($params)
{
return execute($params['param_query']);
}
public function findAll($params)
{
return executeAll($params['param_query']);
} |
public $query;
public function __construct()
{
$this->query = 'param_query';
}
public function find($params)
{
return execute($params[$this->query]);
}
public function findAll($params)
{
return executeAll($params[$this->query]);
} |
Before | After |
---|---|
public function find($params)
{
return execute($params['param_query']);
}
public function findAll($params)
{
return executeAll($params['param_query']);
} |
private $query;
public function find($params)
{
return execute($params[$this->query]);
}
public function findAll($params)
{
return executeAll($params[$this->query]);
}
protected function setUp()
{
$this->query = 'param_query';
parent::setUp();
} |