In the first release of 2023, we aim to improve performance and bring faster indexing, add 3v4l integration, improve support for generics, as well as PHPStan and Psalm tags, add support for multi-composer and multi-vendor projects, and more.īefore the release of 2022.3, we published our first-ever public roadmap and announced what we would be working on. The feedback on the blog, on Reddit, and elsewhere has been very helpful – thank you very much. We decided to continue this tradition and regularly publish our plans. We want PhpStorm to be the best tool for you, so we’ll share our intentions and ideas, and of course we are open to any criticism and suggestions. What’s coming in PhpStorm 2023.1 Better performance for PHP code The plan is subject to change, and we cannot guarantee that all of the items below will make it into version 2023.1. We’re always working on improving performance. But in this release, we’ll put more effort into making PhpStorm significantly faster. There are many things we’ll try to improve. To make the experience of editing and interacting with code lightweight and smooth, we’ll fix known freezes, enhance menu responsiveness, and move some additional computations to background threads. We’ll aim to speed up code highlighting, indexing, and resource-intensive inspections. More actions available during indexingįor you to be able to get the most out of PhpStorm, it first needs to index your files.
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