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The Expression Syntax

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Read the updated version of this page for Symfony 7.2 (the current stable version).

The ExpressionLanguage component uses a specific syntax which is based on the expression syntax of Twig. In this document, you can find all supported syntaxes.

Supported Literals

The component supports:

  • strings - single and double quotes (e.g. 'hello')
  • numbers - e.g. 103
  • arrays - using JSON-like notation (e.g. [1, 2])
  • hashes - using JSON-like notation (e.g. { foo: 'bar' })
  • booleans - true and false
  • null - null
  • exponential - also known as scientific (e.g. 1.99E+3 or 1e-2)

    4.4

    The exponential literal was introduced in Symfony 4.4.

Caution

A backslash (\) must be escaped by 4 backslashes (\\\\) in a string and 8 backslashes (\\\\\\\\) in a regex:

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echo $expressionLanguage->evaluate('"\\\\"'); // prints \
$expressionLanguage->evaluate('"a\\\\b" matches "/^a\\\\\\\\b$/"'); // returns true

Control characters (e.g. \n) in expressions are replaced with whitespace. To avoid this, escape the sequence with a single backslash (e.g. \\n).

Working with Objects

When passing objects into an expression, you can use different syntaxes to access properties and call methods on the object.

Accessing Public Properties

Public properties on objects can be accessed by using the . syntax, similar to JavaScript:

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class Apple
{
    public $variety;
}

$apple = new Apple();
$apple->variety = 'Honeycrisp';

var_dump($expressionLanguage->evaluate(
    'fruit.variety',
    [
        'fruit' => $apple,
    ]
));

This will print out Honeycrisp.

Calling Methods

The . syntax can also be used to call methods on an object, similar to JavaScript:

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class Robot
{
    public function sayHi($times)
    {
        $greetings = [];
        for ($i = 0; $i < $times; $i++) {
            $greetings[] = 'Hi';
        }

        return implode(' ', $greetings).'!';
    }
}

$robot = new Robot();

var_dump($expressionLanguage->evaluate(
    'robot.sayHi(3)',
    [
        'robot' => $robot,
    ]
));

This will print out Hi Hi Hi!.

Working with Functions

You can also use registered functions in the expression by using the same syntax as PHP and JavaScript. The ExpressionLanguage component comes with one function by default: constant(), which will return the value of the PHP constant:

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define('DB_USER', 'root');

var_dump($expressionLanguage->evaluate(
    'constant("DB_USER")'
));

This will print out root.

Tip

To read how to register your own functions to use in an expression, see "Extending the ExpressionLanguage".

Working with Arrays

If you pass an array into an expression, use the [] syntax to access array keys, similar to JavaScript:

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$data = ['life' => 10, 'universe' => 10, 'everything' => 22];

var_dump($expressionLanguage->evaluate(
    'data["life"] + data["universe"] + data["everything"]',
    [
        'data' => $data,
    ]
));

This will print out 42.

Supported Operators

The component comes with a lot of operators:

Arithmetic Operators

  • + (addition)
  • - (subtraction)
  • * (multiplication)
  • / (division)
  • % (modulus)
  • ** (pow)

For example:

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var_dump($expressionLanguage->evaluate(
    'life + universe + everything',
    [
        'life' => 10,
        'universe' => 10,
        'everything' => 22,
    ]
));

This will print out 42.

Bitwise Operators

  • & (and)
  • | (or)
  • ^ (xor)

Comparison Operators

  • == (equal)
  • === (identical)
  • != (not equal)
  • !== (not identical)
  • < (less than)
  • > (greater than)
  • <= (less than or equal to)
  • >= (greater than or equal to)
  • matches (regex match)

Tip

To test if a string does not match a regex, use the logical not operator in combination with the matches operator:

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$expressionLanguage->evaluate('not ("foo" matches "/bar/")'); // returns true

You must use parentheses because the unary operator not has precedence over the binary operator matches.

Examples:

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$ret1 = $expressionLanguage->evaluate(
    'life == everything',
    [
        'life' => 10,
        'everything' => 22,
    ]
);

$ret2 = $expressionLanguage->evaluate(
    'life > everything',
    [
        'life' => 10,
        'everything' => 22,
    ]
);

Both variables would be set to false.

Logical Operators

  • not or !
  • and or &&
  • or or ||

For example:

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$ret = $expressionLanguage->evaluate(
    'life < universe or life < everything',
    [
        'life' => 10,
        'universe' => 10,
        'everything' => 22,
    ]
);

This $ret variable will be set to true.

String Operators

  • ~ (concatenation)

For example:

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var_dump($expressionLanguage->evaluate(
    'firstName~" "~lastName',
    [
        'firstName' => 'Arthur',
        'lastName' => 'Dent',
    ]
));

This would print out Arthur Dent.

Array Operators

  • in (contain)
  • not in (does not contain)

For example:

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class User
{
    public $group;
}

$user = new User();
$user->group = 'human_resources';

$inGroup = $expressionLanguage->evaluate(
    'user.group in ["human_resources", "marketing"]',
    [
        'user' => $user,
    ]
);

The $inGroup would evaluate to true.

Numeric Operators

  • .. (range)

For example:

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class User
{
    public $age;
}

$user = new User();
$user->age = 34;

$expressionLanguage->evaluate(
    'user.age in 18..45',
    [
        'user' => $user,
    ]
);

This will evaluate to true, because user.age is in the range from 18 to 45.

Ternary Operators

  • foo ? 'yes' : 'no'
  • foo ?: 'no' (equal to foo ? foo : 'no')
  • foo ? 'yes' (equal to foo ? 'yes' : '')

Built-in Objects and Variables

When using this component inside a Symfony application, certain objects and variables are automatically injected by Symfony so you can use them in your expressions (e.g. the request, the current user, etc.):

This work, including the code samples, is licensed under a Creative Commons BY-SA 3.0 license.
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