Inline documentation
A special case is documentation that many of us have done regularly since we started writing software: comments. These are written directly in the code, where the developers can immediately see them, so that seems to be a good place to put documentation. But should comments really be seen as or used for documentation?
In our opinion, comments should generally be avoided. Let us have a look at some arguments on the next pages.
Annotations are no code
Comments are not part of the code. Although it is possible to parse comments through the Reflection API of PHP, they were originally not meant to store meta information. Ideally, your software should still work the same after stripping out all comments.
Today, though, this is often not the case anymore. Frameworks and packages such as object-relational mappers (ORMs) use DocBlock annotations to store information in them, such as route definitions or relations between database objects. Some code quality tools...