why interfaces in dynamic/loosely

I work in php, and the concept of interfaces seems to me a little useless here. From reading, I understand that interfaces are part of "design by contract", but without at least guaranteeing a return of a type of a particular kind, there really isn't any contract. It seems it's like a contract that reads, "We agree to do the following: '' " -- there are no terms of the agreement.

If I want a guarantee that an object has a method, it doesn't seem like interfaces are particularly useful. If I try to call a method that an object doesn't have, I get a Fatal Error, so I find out pretty quickly that that class doesn't have a method with that name. If I want to be smart and check beforehand whether a class has a method, then checking the interface, and seeing whether the object implements that interface doesn't seem to save me any more time than just checking that object directly ( which I would do anyways to see if the class had that method regardless of any interfaces it did or didn't implement).

In other words, just because I have a set of methods that have particular names, that doesn't guarantee me any particular behavior. If I'm guaranteed a return of a variable of a certain type, I at least have some inkling of what the output would be, and I can write code that uses an object with that interface, because I know what I'm getting out of it. If it returns a string, I can continue coding with at least the certainty that I'm dealing with a string output afterward. So I'm guaranteed at least some behavior when a return type is specified. Is guaranteeing behavior part of what interfaces are for, or no?

The only thing I can think of is that when I'm writing code, it serves as a post-it note to myself to be sure to create certain methods when writing that class later on. It seems more like scaffolding for when I'm writing the code; I don't see much benefit from when I'm actually using it. So it's more for me to keep the standard when I'm creating classes than when I'm writing them. This benefit doesn't really seem to be captured in the concept of design by contract.

What benefit(s) do you actually get from using an interface in dynamic/loose-typed languages like PHP? Are they great, or is it something that more robust OO languages implement, so PHP implements it also?


Interfaces are used when you actually expect an object to implement a method.

For example, if I'm building a DB wrapper and it supports behaviours, which you register yourself in a bootstrap, then before running your behaviours (for example, sluggable), I will check that they implement my "DB_Wrapper_Behaviour_Interface" by using:

if(!($behaviourObject instanceof DB_Wrapper_Behaviour_Interface)) {
    throw new Exception("Your behaviour doesn't implement my interface");
}

Design by contract is made more difficult without return types, but don't forget to favour 'tell' over 'ask'.

I believe an interface to be something like a responsibility. You are coding and need a collaborator. You ask it to do something because the code you are working on can't do everything. So you're asking another object to do something. An interface guarantees that the collaborator will do the job, but hides the 'how' it's done part.

Now you could argue that there's no need for the formal contract here, since the system will throw an error anyway if the collaborator can't do what you're asking it to do. But I think that misses the point in using interfaces as a responsibility.


Getting a fatal error is not always "easy". Sometimes you have to go on a specific module/action to see that something is actually missing in your class. The interface enables you to make sure every method is implemented and to document these method (what the parameters are exactly going to be, what the return values should look like). This is useful if the parameters/values are arrays with a particular structure and you don't want to use classes instead (for the sake of simplicty).

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