A new year often comes with new goals, ideas, and plans for the future. We start with the best intentions to achieve all of those things; however, somewhere between the end of January and Springtime, we have lost all motivation to keep them up. Hmmm…that timing makes me think of something… the Tek 25 conference […]
The post Cranking PHPStan to 10 appeared first on php[architect].
https://www.phparch.com/magazine/2025/01/2025-01-cranking-phpstan-to-10/
Chcete-li přidat komentář, přihlaste se
Ostatní příspěvky v této skupině

Git. It’s the lifeblood of modern software development. After several years of navigating through code repositories and juggling various project versions, it’s easy for seasoned developers to

The social networking landscape has changed so dramatically in the past five years. It’s challenging to keep up with. When you get on a new social network, one of the first hurdles you have i

This week on the PHP Podcast, Eric and John discuss PHPStan 2.0, Facebook blocking Linux, JetBrains The State of PHP 2024, what’s new in PhpStorm 2024.3, and more. Links from the show:

PHPStan 2.0 was released last quarter, and it brings a plethora of great changes. If you are not already using PHPStan and you’d like to but could use some outside help, please contact us, an

Lesser-known PHP features In the realm of PHP, developers often underexploit a treasure trove of powerful features. On a recent episode of The PHP Podcast, we had a great discussion about a blog po

How it started I am not aware of anyone who doesn’t know that PHP’s mascot is an elePHPant, created by Vincent Pontier back in 1998. Most “serious” PHP Developers have at le

Laravel is known for its elegant approach to structuring complex logic. I’ve been using Laravel since the release of Laravel 4, and it has pretty consistently added new helpful feature