What is the benefit of assigning null to some parameters in construct?












1















Not sure if it is Magento related question. But need to understand this.



I have seen some of the parameters in construct are assigned to null value.



For example:



/**
* Initialize dependencies.
*
* @param MagentoFrameworkModelContext $context
* @param MagentoFrameworkRegistry $registry
* @param MagentoFrameworkApiExtensionAttributesFactory $extensionFactory
* @param AttributeValueFactory $customAttributeFactory
* @param MagentoSalesModelOrderFactory $orderFactory
* @param MagentoStoreModelStoreManagerInterface $storeManager
* @param MagentoCatalogApiProductRepositoryInterface $productRepository
* @param MagentoFrameworkModelResourceModelAbstractResource $resource
* @param MagentoFrameworkDataCollectionAbstractDb $resourceCollection
* @param array $data
* @param MagentoFrameworkSerializeSerializerJson|null $serializer
* @SuppressWarnings(PHPMD.ExcessiveParameterList)
*/
public function __construct(
MagentoFrameworkModelContext $context,
MagentoFrameworkRegistry $registry,
MagentoFrameworkApiExtensionAttributesFactory $extensionFactory,
AttributeValueFactory $customAttributeFactory,
MagentoSalesModelOrderFactory $orderFactory,
MagentoStoreModelStoreManagerInterface $storeManager,
MagentoCatalogApiProductRepositoryInterface $productRepository,
MagentoFrameworkModelResourceModelAbstractResource $resource = null,
MagentoFrameworkDataCollectionAbstractDb $resourceCollection = null,
array $data = ,
MagentoFrameworkSerializeSerializerJson $serializer = null
) {
parent::__construct(
$context,
$registry,
$extensionFactory,
$customAttributeFactory,
$resource,
$resourceCollection,
$data
);
$this->serializer = $serializer ?: MagentoFrameworkAppObjectManager::getInstance()
->get(MagentoFrameworkSerializeSerializerJson::class);
$this->_orderFactory = $orderFactory;
$this->_storeManager = $storeManager;
$this->productRepository = $productRepository;
}


MagentoFrameworkSerializeSerializerJson $serializer = null is assigned to null. And in the function it is assigned to object.



$this->serializer = $serializer ?: MagentoFrameworkAppObjectManager::getInstance()
->get(MagentoFrameworkSerializeSerializerJson::class);









share|improve this question



























    1















    Not sure if it is Magento related question. But need to understand this.



    I have seen some of the parameters in construct are assigned to null value.



    For example:



    /**
    * Initialize dependencies.
    *
    * @param MagentoFrameworkModelContext $context
    * @param MagentoFrameworkRegistry $registry
    * @param MagentoFrameworkApiExtensionAttributesFactory $extensionFactory
    * @param AttributeValueFactory $customAttributeFactory
    * @param MagentoSalesModelOrderFactory $orderFactory
    * @param MagentoStoreModelStoreManagerInterface $storeManager
    * @param MagentoCatalogApiProductRepositoryInterface $productRepository
    * @param MagentoFrameworkModelResourceModelAbstractResource $resource
    * @param MagentoFrameworkDataCollectionAbstractDb $resourceCollection
    * @param array $data
    * @param MagentoFrameworkSerializeSerializerJson|null $serializer
    * @SuppressWarnings(PHPMD.ExcessiveParameterList)
    */
    public function __construct(
    MagentoFrameworkModelContext $context,
    MagentoFrameworkRegistry $registry,
    MagentoFrameworkApiExtensionAttributesFactory $extensionFactory,
    AttributeValueFactory $customAttributeFactory,
    MagentoSalesModelOrderFactory $orderFactory,
    MagentoStoreModelStoreManagerInterface $storeManager,
    MagentoCatalogApiProductRepositoryInterface $productRepository,
    MagentoFrameworkModelResourceModelAbstractResource $resource = null,
    MagentoFrameworkDataCollectionAbstractDb $resourceCollection = null,
    array $data = ,
    MagentoFrameworkSerializeSerializerJson $serializer = null
    ) {
    parent::__construct(
    $context,
    $registry,
    $extensionFactory,
    $customAttributeFactory,
    $resource,
    $resourceCollection,
    $data
    );
    $this->serializer = $serializer ?: MagentoFrameworkAppObjectManager::getInstance()
    ->get(MagentoFrameworkSerializeSerializerJson::class);
    $this->_orderFactory = $orderFactory;
    $this->_storeManager = $storeManager;
    $this->productRepository = $productRepository;
    }


    MagentoFrameworkSerializeSerializerJson $serializer = null is assigned to null. And in the function it is assigned to object.



    $this->serializer = $serializer ?: MagentoFrameworkAppObjectManager::getInstance()
    ->get(MagentoFrameworkSerializeSerializerJson::class);









    share|improve this question

























      1












      1








      1








      Not sure if it is Magento related question. But need to understand this.



      I have seen some of the parameters in construct are assigned to null value.



      For example:



      /**
      * Initialize dependencies.
      *
      * @param MagentoFrameworkModelContext $context
      * @param MagentoFrameworkRegistry $registry
      * @param MagentoFrameworkApiExtensionAttributesFactory $extensionFactory
      * @param AttributeValueFactory $customAttributeFactory
      * @param MagentoSalesModelOrderFactory $orderFactory
      * @param MagentoStoreModelStoreManagerInterface $storeManager
      * @param MagentoCatalogApiProductRepositoryInterface $productRepository
      * @param MagentoFrameworkModelResourceModelAbstractResource $resource
      * @param MagentoFrameworkDataCollectionAbstractDb $resourceCollection
      * @param array $data
      * @param MagentoFrameworkSerializeSerializerJson|null $serializer
      * @SuppressWarnings(PHPMD.ExcessiveParameterList)
      */
      public function __construct(
      MagentoFrameworkModelContext $context,
      MagentoFrameworkRegistry $registry,
      MagentoFrameworkApiExtensionAttributesFactory $extensionFactory,
      AttributeValueFactory $customAttributeFactory,
      MagentoSalesModelOrderFactory $orderFactory,
      MagentoStoreModelStoreManagerInterface $storeManager,
      MagentoCatalogApiProductRepositoryInterface $productRepository,
      MagentoFrameworkModelResourceModelAbstractResource $resource = null,
      MagentoFrameworkDataCollectionAbstractDb $resourceCollection = null,
      array $data = ,
      MagentoFrameworkSerializeSerializerJson $serializer = null
      ) {
      parent::__construct(
      $context,
      $registry,
      $extensionFactory,
      $customAttributeFactory,
      $resource,
      $resourceCollection,
      $data
      );
      $this->serializer = $serializer ?: MagentoFrameworkAppObjectManager::getInstance()
      ->get(MagentoFrameworkSerializeSerializerJson::class);
      $this->_orderFactory = $orderFactory;
      $this->_storeManager = $storeManager;
      $this->productRepository = $productRepository;
      }


      MagentoFrameworkSerializeSerializerJson $serializer = null is assigned to null. And in the function it is assigned to object.



      $this->serializer = $serializer ?: MagentoFrameworkAppObjectManager::getInstance()
      ->get(MagentoFrameworkSerializeSerializerJson::class);









      share|improve this question














      Not sure if it is Magento related question. But need to understand this.



      I have seen some of the parameters in construct are assigned to null value.



      For example:



      /**
      * Initialize dependencies.
      *
      * @param MagentoFrameworkModelContext $context
      * @param MagentoFrameworkRegistry $registry
      * @param MagentoFrameworkApiExtensionAttributesFactory $extensionFactory
      * @param AttributeValueFactory $customAttributeFactory
      * @param MagentoSalesModelOrderFactory $orderFactory
      * @param MagentoStoreModelStoreManagerInterface $storeManager
      * @param MagentoCatalogApiProductRepositoryInterface $productRepository
      * @param MagentoFrameworkModelResourceModelAbstractResource $resource
      * @param MagentoFrameworkDataCollectionAbstractDb $resourceCollection
      * @param array $data
      * @param MagentoFrameworkSerializeSerializerJson|null $serializer
      * @SuppressWarnings(PHPMD.ExcessiveParameterList)
      */
      public function __construct(
      MagentoFrameworkModelContext $context,
      MagentoFrameworkRegistry $registry,
      MagentoFrameworkApiExtensionAttributesFactory $extensionFactory,
      AttributeValueFactory $customAttributeFactory,
      MagentoSalesModelOrderFactory $orderFactory,
      MagentoStoreModelStoreManagerInterface $storeManager,
      MagentoCatalogApiProductRepositoryInterface $productRepository,
      MagentoFrameworkModelResourceModelAbstractResource $resource = null,
      MagentoFrameworkDataCollectionAbstractDb $resourceCollection = null,
      array $data = ,
      MagentoFrameworkSerializeSerializerJson $serializer = null
      ) {
      parent::__construct(
      $context,
      $registry,
      $extensionFactory,
      $customAttributeFactory,
      $resource,
      $resourceCollection,
      $data
      );
      $this->serializer = $serializer ?: MagentoFrameworkAppObjectManager::getInstance()
      ->get(MagentoFrameworkSerializeSerializerJson::class);
      $this->_orderFactory = $orderFactory;
      $this->_storeManager = $storeManager;
      $this->productRepository = $productRepository;
      }


      MagentoFrameworkSerializeSerializerJson $serializer = null is assigned to null. And in the function it is assigned to object.



      $this->serializer = $serializer ?: MagentoFrameworkAppObjectManager::getInstance()
      ->get(MagentoFrameworkSerializeSerializerJson::class);






      magento2






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      share|improve this question










      asked 3 hours ago









      Adarsh KhatriAdarsh Khatri

      6,73511644




      6,73511644






















          1 Answer
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          oldest

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          3














          This is done for backward compatibility. For instance, if a class was inherited and the child class doesn't specify the needed argument the class initialization doesn't fail, the missed dependency will be initialized by ObjectManager.



          Such workaround was added in Magento 2.2.0 release when all public code was marked as @api to don't break extensions which might use the private code. Starting from 2.2.0, the code which not marked as @api might be changed in a patch release and it won't be a breaking change because other classes should not depend on the private implementation.



          For more details, please, see Adding a constructor parameter section in the official documentation.






          share|improve this answer
























          • That make sense now. Thanks.

            – Adarsh Khatri
            1 hour ago











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          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes








          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          3














          This is done for backward compatibility. For instance, if a class was inherited and the child class doesn't specify the needed argument the class initialization doesn't fail, the missed dependency will be initialized by ObjectManager.



          Such workaround was added in Magento 2.2.0 release when all public code was marked as @api to don't break extensions which might use the private code. Starting from 2.2.0, the code which not marked as @api might be changed in a patch release and it won't be a breaking change because other classes should not depend on the private implementation.



          For more details, please, see Adding a constructor parameter section in the official documentation.






          share|improve this answer
























          • That make sense now. Thanks.

            – Adarsh Khatri
            1 hour ago
















          3














          This is done for backward compatibility. For instance, if a class was inherited and the child class doesn't specify the needed argument the class initialization doesn't fail, the missed dependency will be initialized by ObjectManager.



          Such workaround was added in Magento 2.2.0 release when all public code was marked as @api to don't break extensions which might use the private code. Starting from 2.2.0, the code which not marked as @api might be changed in a patch release and it won't be a breaking change because other classes should not depend on the private implementation.



          For more details, please, see Adding a constructor parameter section in the official documentation.






          share|improve this answer
























          • That make sense now. Thanks.

            – Adarsh Khatri
            1 hour ago














          3












          3








          3







          This is done for backward compatibility. For instance, if a class was inherited and the child class doesn't specify the needed argument the class initialization doesn't fail, the missed dependency will be initialized by ObjectManager.



          Such workaround was added in Magento 2.2.0 release when all public code was marked as @api to don't break extensions which might use the private code. Starting from 2.2.0, the code which not marked as @api might be changed in a patch release and it won't be a breaking change because other classes should not depend on the private implementation.



          For more details, please, see Adding a constructor parameter section in the official documentation.






          share|improve this answer













          This is done for backward compatibility. For instance, if a class was inherited and the child class doesn't specify the needed argument the class initialization doesn't fail, the missed dependency will be initialized by ObjectManager.



          Such workaround was added in Magento 2.2.0 release when all public code was marked as @api to don't break extensions which might use the private code. Starting from 2.2.0, the code which not marked as @api might be changed in a patch release and it won't be a breaking change because other classes should not depend on the private implementation.



          For more details, please, see Adding a constructor parameter section in the official documentation.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered 2 hours ago









          joni jonesjoni jones

          1,808414




          1,808414













          • That make sense now. Thanks.

            – Adarsh Khatri
            1 hour ago



















          • That make sense now. Thanks.

            – Adarsh Khatri
            1 hour ago

















          That make sense now. Thanks.

          – Adarsh Khatri
          1 hour ago





          That make sense now. Thanks.

          – Adarsh Khatri
          1 hour ago


















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