Arrow functions were introduced in PHP 7.4. They offer you a way to write simple operations, such as calculations, filters, or maps.
Table of Content
Arrow functions help with simple tasks. You can filter numbers or square values. Also, you can add constants by using fn($n) => $n + 2
inside array functions.
You don’t need to use the use
keyword to access outer variables, and you rarely need global
inside arrow functions.
Understand How Arrow Functions (fn
) Work in PHP
PHP arrow functions give you a shorter way to write simple or repeated functions. You can store them in a variable and call them through that variable.
Here’s the basic syntax:
$func = fn() => VALUES_TO_RETURN;
This syntax uses a short (arrow) function. It skips the function
keyword and curly braces. The fn()
defines the arrow function, and =>
returns the value directly—no need to use the return statement.
Arrow functions and traditional anonymous functions both let you create callback functions, but they handle variables from the outer scope differently.
Traditional Anonymous Function:
Here, you must explicitly list external variables with use
.
$factor = 2;
$multiply = function ($n) use ($factor) {
return $n * $factor;
};
echo $multiply(10);
Output:
20
Arrow Function:
It automatically uses variables from the parent scope. No need to use the use
keyword.
$factor = 2;
$multiply = fn($n) => $n * $factor;
echo $multiply(30);
Output:
60
Here are the key differences for each one
Arrow functions:
- They always return the result—no return statement needed.
- They capture variables by value automatically.
Anonymous functions:
- You need to use the
use (...)
keyword to access outer variables. - Arrow syntax is shorter.
The main benefit? It lets you write shorter code. For example, when you need a callback function—like with array functions such as array_filter
.
Here is an example:
Traditional anonymous function:
$numbers = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
$square = array_map(function ($n) {
return $n * $n;
}, $numbers);
print_r($square );
Output:
Array
(
[0] => 1
[1] => 4
[2] => 9
[3] => 16
[4] => 25
)
Arrow function version:
$numbers = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
$square = array_map(fn($n) => $n * $n, $numbers);
The output of this example will be the same as the previous one.
Here’s another example that shows how to use array filter numbers fn($n) => $n % 2 === 0
:
$numbers = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
$even = array_filter($numbers, fn($n) => $n % 2 === 0);
print_r($even);
Output:
Array
(
[1] => 2
[3] => 4
)
This code filters even numbers from an array with an arrow function. Using the fn($n) => $n % 2 === 0
with array_filter
is a common arrow function use case.
So, when and why to use them? Let’s answer this question in the following section.
When and Why to Use Arrow Functions in PHP?
Use arrow functions when you do small tasks. They work best in callback functions or simple operations. That happens when you use array functions such as
array_map
array_filter
array_reduce
.
Here are why you have to use them:
- It helps you write short code.
- No need for
use
keyword to access global scope variables. - Automatic return saves space.
- It is readable and it has short functions.
When to use them:
- Inline functions that do one thing.
- Short logic in closures.
- Situations where readability matters.
- Callback functions inside array operations.
Lexical Scoping Clarity
Arrow functions manage scope differently from a traditional anonymous function. Arrow functions copy variables from the parent scope by value automatically instead of the use
keyword.
This feature makes the function shorter and easier to write, especially when you do not want to repeat variable names.
This rule is part of what PHP calls lexical scoping. Arrow functions do not have their own scope. They automatically capture variables from the surrounding context by value.
Here is an example:
$multiplier = 10;
$calculate = function ($value) use ($multiplier) {
return $value * $multiplier;
};
$arrowCalculate = fn($value) => $value * $multiplier;
print_r( $arrowCalculate(55) );
The output:
550
In the first function, you see the use
keyword. It tells PHP to bring $multiplier
into the function from the outer scope. If you remove use ($multiplier)
, the function would not know what $multiplier
means, and you would get an error.
In the second function, the arrow function skips use
. It still accesses $multiplier
because arrow functions automatically copy variables from the parent scope. This rule is called lexical scoping.
The arrow function does not create its own scope. It reuses the one from where it was created. The arrow functions only allow one expression. No blocks, no extra lines.
Examples
Print a message with an arrow function:
$uname = "Montasser";
$greet = fn() => "Hello, $uname!";
echo $greet();
The arrow function uses a variable from the outer scope ($uname
). You don’t need to pass it or use use
.
This works because arrow functions automatically inherit from the surrounding scope. It’s useful for short messages or responses.
Discount calculator:
$discount = 15;
$applyDiscount = fn($price) => $price - ($price * $discount / 100);
echo $applyDiscount(200);
The 15% is a discount. In this function, we used the $discount
from outside. No extra code needed. Arrow functions are good for this kind of logic where you apply a formula.
Here is how to sort with a custom rule:
$names = ["john", "Alice", "bob"];
usort($names, fn($a, $b) => strtolower($a) <=> strtolower($b));
print_r($names);
The arrow function tells usort
how to compare the names. It converts both to lowercase, so sorting ignores case. This keeps the sorting logic short and inside the usort
call.
Use in a loop with an external variable:
$bonus = 50;
$salaries = [1000, 1200, 1500];
$withBonus = array_map(fn($salary) => $salary + $bonus, $salaries);
print_r($withBonus);
Arrow function adds the same bonus to each salary. It uses $bonus
from outside. No need for use
. This shows how arrow functions keep your loop logic cleaner and shorter.
Limitations of Arrow Functions
Arrow functions only support a single expression. They cannot include control structures like if
, for
, or while
, and they do not support multiple statements.
For complex logic, use traditional anonymous functions.
PHP Arrow Function Challenges (Solve These with fn Syntax)
Challenge 1: Multi-Level Array Filter
You are given a 2D array of integers. Filter out subarrays where the sum of elements is less than 100.
$data = [
[50, 60],
[30, 20],
[90, 20]
];
Note: Use array_filter
with array_sum
inside fn
.
Expected output:
[
[50, 60],
[90, 20]
]
Your answer:
Challenge 2: Sort by Last Character
Sort an array of words alphabetically based on their last character, using usort
and an arrow function.
$words = ['apple', 'banana', 'grape', 'orange'];
Note: This should use fn
syntax (arrow function) to sort based on ‘e’, ‘a’, ‘e’, ‘e’.
Expected Output:
[
'banana', // ends with 'a'
'apple', // ends with 'e'
'grape', // ends with 'e'
'orange' // ends with 'e'
]
Your answer:
Challenge 3: Dynamic Tax Calculator
Create a function $addTax = fn($rate) => fn($price) => $price + ($price * $rate);
Then apply it to a price list using array_map
.
$prices = [100, 250, 75];
$vat = 0.2; // 20%
Note: You should use fn
syntax (arrow function) with $addTax to create a closure, then apply it
Expected Output:
[ 120, 300, 90 ]
Your answer:
Wrapping Up
You learned in this tutorial how PHP arrow functions work and how they handle scope without extra setup. You also saw when to use them and how they make your code readable.
Here’s a quick recap:
- Arrow functions use
fn
and need only one expression. - They inherit variables from the outer scope automatically.
- You don’t need
use
orglobal
. - They return values without writing
return
. - Avoid them for anything that needs multiple lines or complex logic.
FAQ’s
Can arrow functions replace all anonymous functions?
Do arrow functions affect performance?
Can arrow functions have multiple lines?
Can arrow functions access global variables?
Can arrow functions be recursive?
Can I use multiple parameters in an arrow function?
$sum = fn($a, $b, $c) => $a + $b + $c;
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