Annotations ----------- @ExclusionPolicy ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This annotation can be defined on a class to indicate the exclusion strategy that should be used for the class. +----------+----------------------------------------------------------------+ | Policy | Description | +==========+================================================================+ | all | all properties are excluded by default; only properties marked | | | with @Expose will be serialized/unserialized | +----------+----------------------------------------------------------------+ | none | no properties are excluded by default; all properties except | | | those marked with @Exclude will be serialized/unserialized | +----------+----------------------------------------------------------------+ @Exclude ~~~~~~~~ This annotation can be defined on a property to indicate that the property should not be serialized/unserialized. Works only in combination with NoneExclusionPolicy. @Expose ~~~~~~~ This annotation can be defined on a property to indicate that the property should be serialized/unserialized. Works only in combination with AllExclusionPolicy. @SerializedName ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This annotation can be defined on a property to define the serialized name for a property. If this is not defined, the property will be translated from camel-case to a lower-cased underscored name, e.g. camelCase -> camel_case. @Since ~~~~~~ This annotation can be defined on a property to specify starting from which version this property is available. If an earlier version is serialized, then this property is excluded automatically. The version must be in a format that is understood by PHP's ``version_compare`` function. @Until ~~~~~~ This annotation can be defined on a property to specify until which version this property was available. If a later version is serialized, then this property is excluded automatically. The version must be in a format that is understood by PHP's ``version_compare`` function. @AccessType ~~~~~~~~~~~ This annotation can be defined on a property, or a class to specify in which way the properties should be accessed. By default, the serializer will retrieve, or set the value via reflection, but you may change this to use a public method instead:: /** @AccessType("public_method") */ class User { private $name; public function getName() { return $this->name; } public function setName($name) { $this->name = trim($name); } } @Accessor ~~~~~~~~~ This annotation can be defined on a property to specify which public method should be called to retrieve, or set the value of the given property:: class User { private $id; /** @Accessor(getter="getTrimmedName") */ private $name; // ... public function getTrimmedName() { return trim($this->name); } public function setName($name) { $this->name = $name; } } @AccessorOrder ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This annotation can be defined on a class to control the order of properties. By default the order is undefined, but you may change it to either "alphabetical", or "custom". :: /** * @AccessorOrder("alphabetical") * * Resulting Property Order: id, name */ class User { private $id; private $name; } /** * @AccessorOrder("custom", custom = {"name", "id"}) * * Resulting Property Order: name, id */ class User { private $id; private $name; } @Inline ~~~~~~~~ This annotation can be defined on a property to indicate that the data of the property should be inlined. **Note**: This only works for serialization, the serializer will not be able to deserialize objects with this annotation. Also, AccessorOrder will be using the name of the property to determine the order. @ReadOnly ~~~~~~~~~ This annotation can be defined on a property to indicate that the data of the property is read only and cannot be set during deserialization. @PreSerialize ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This annotation can be defined on a method which is supposed to be called before the serialization of the object starts. @PostSerialize ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This annotation can be defined on a method which is then called directly after the object has been serialized. @PostDeserialize ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This annotation can be defined on a method which is supposed to be called after the object has been deserialized. @Type ~~~~~ This annotation can be defined on a property to specify the type of that property. This annotation must only be defined when you want to be able to deserialize an object. Available Types: +---------------------------+--------------------------------------------------+ | Type | Description | +===========================+==================================================+ | boolean | Primitive boolean | +---------------------------+--------------------------------------------------+ | integer | Primitive integer | +---------------------------+--------------------------------------------------+ | double | Primitive double | +---------------------------+--------------------------------------------------+ | string | Primitive string | +---------------------------+--------------------------------------------------+ | array | An array with arbitrary keys, and values. | +---------------------------+--------------------------------------------------+ | array | A list of type T (T can be any available type). | | | Examples: | | | array, array, etc. | +---------------------------+--------------------------------------------------+ | array | A map of keys of type K to values of type V. | | | Examples: array, | | | array, etc. | +---------------------------+--------------------------------------------------+ | DateTime | PHP's DateTime object | +---------------------------+--------------------------------------------------+ | T | Where T is a fully qualified class name. | +---------------------------+--------------------------------------------------+ | ArrayCollection | Similar to array, but will be deserialized | | | into Doctrine's ArrayCollection class. | +---------------------------+--------------------------------------------------+ | ArrayCollection | Similar to array, but will be deserialized | | | into Doctrine's ArrayCollection class. | +---------------------------+--------------------------------------------------+ Examples:: ") */ private $comments; /** * @Type("string") */ private $title; /** * @Type("MyNamespace\Author") */ private $author; /** * @Type("DateTime") */ private $createdAt; /** * @Type("boolean") */ private $published; /** * @Type("array") */ private $keyValueStore; } @XmlRoot ~~~~~~~~ This allows you to specify the name of the top-level element. :: @XmlAttribute ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This allows you to mark properties which should be set as attributes, and not as child elements. :: @XmlValue ~~~~~~~~~ This allows you to mark properties which should be set as the value of the current element. Note that this has the limitation that any additional properties of that object must have the @XmlAttribute annotation. :: 1.23 @XmlList ~~~~~~~~ This allows you to define several properties of how arrays should be serialized. This is very similar to @XmlMap, and should be used if the keys of the array are not important. :: text = $text; } } Resulting XML:: @XmlMap ~~~~~~~ Similar to @XmlList, but the keys of the array are meaningful.