Complex classes like WPCOM_REST_API_V2_Field_Controller often do a lot of different things. To break such a class down, we need to identify a cohesive component within that class. A common approach to find such a component is to look for fields/methods that share the same prefixes, or suffixes. You can also have a look at the cohesion graph to spot any un-connected, or weakly-connected components.
Once you have determined the fields that belong together, you can apply the Extract Class refactoring. If the component makes sense as a sub-class, Extract Subclass is also a candidate, and is often faster.
While breaking up the class, it is a good idea to analyze how other classes use WPCOM_REST_API_V2_Field_Controller, and based on these observations, apply Extract Interface, too.
1 | <?php |
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9 | abstract class WPCOM_REST_API_V2_Field_Controller { |
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10 | /** |
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11 | * @var string|string[] $object_type The REST Object Type(s) to which the field should be added. |
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12 | */ |
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13 | protected $object_type; |
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14 | |||
15 | /** |
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16 | * @var string $field_name The name of the REST API field to add. |
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17 | */ |
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18 | protected $field_name; |
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19 | |||
20 | public function __construct() { |
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35 | |||
36 | /** |
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37 | * Registers the field with the appropriate schema and callbacks. |
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38 | */ |
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39 | public function register_fields() { |
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48 | |||
49 | /** |
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50 | * Ensures the response matches the schema and request context. |
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51 | * |
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52 | * You shouldn't have to extend this method. |
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53 | * |
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54 | * @param mixed $value |
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55 | * @param WP_REST_Request $request |
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56 | * @return mixed |
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57 | */ |
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58 | function prepare_for_response( $value, $request ) { |
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69 | |||
70 | /** |
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71 | * Returns the schema's default value |
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72 | * |
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73 | * If there is no default, returns the type's falsey value. |
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74 | * |
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75 | * @param array $schema |
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76 | * @return mixed |
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77 | */ |
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78 | final public function get_default_value( $schema ) { |
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101 | |||
102 | /** |
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103 | * The field's wrapped getter. Does permission checks and output preparation. |
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104 | * |
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105 | * This cannot be extended: implement `->get()` instead. |
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106 | * |
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107 | * @param mixed $object_data Probably an array. Whatever the endpoint returns. |
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108 | * @param string $field_name Should always match `->field_name` |
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109 | * @param WP_REST_Request $request |
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110 | * @param $object_type Should always match `->object_type` |
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111 | * @return mixed |
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112 | */ |
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113 | final public function get_for_response( $object_data, $field_name, $request, $object_type ) { |
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124 | |||
125 | /** |
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126 | * The field's wrapped setter. Does permission checks. |
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127 | * |
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128 | * This cannot be extended: implement `->update()` instead. |
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129 | * |
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130 | * @param mixed $value The new value for the field. |
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131 | * @param mixed $object_data Probably a WordPress object (e.g., WP_Post) |
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132 | * @param string $field_name Should always match `->field_name` |
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133 | * @param WP_REST_Request $request |
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134 | * @param $object_type Should always match `->object_type` |
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135 | * @return void|WP_Error |
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136 | */ |
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137 | final public function update_from_request( $value, $object_data, $field_name, $request, $object_type ) { |
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156 | |||
157 | /** |
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158 | * Permission Check for the field's getter. Must be implemented in the inheriting class. |
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159 | * |
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160 | * @param mixed $object_data Whatever the endpoint would returnn for its response. |
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161 | * @param WP_REST_Request |
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162 | * @return true|WP_Error |
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163 | */ |
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164 | public function get_permission_check( $object_data, $request ) { |
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168 | |||
169 | /** |
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170 | * The field's "raw" getter. Must be implemented in the inheriting class. |
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171 | * |
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172 | * @param mixed $object_data Whatever the endpoint would returnn for its response. |
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173 | * @param WP_REST_Request |
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174 | * @return mixed |
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175 | */ |
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176 | public function get( $object_data, $request ) { |
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180 | |||
181 | /** |
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182 | * Permission Check for the field's setter. Must be implemented in the inheriting class. |
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183 | * |
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184 | * @param mixed $value The new value for the field. |
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185 | * @param mixed $object_data Probably a WordPress object (e.g., WP_Post) |
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186 | * @param WP_REST_Request |
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187 | * @return true|WP_Error |
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188 | */ |
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189 | public function update_permission_check( $value, $object_data, $request ) { |
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193 | |||
194 | /** |
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195 | * The field's "raw" setter. Must be implemented in the inheriting class. |
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196 | * |
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197 | * @param mixed $value The new value for the field. |
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198 | * @param mixed $object_data Probably a WordPress object (e.g., WP_Post) |
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199 | * @param WP_REST_Request |
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200 | * @return mixed |
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201 | */ |
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202 | public function update( $value, $object_data, $request ) { |
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206 | |||
207 | /** |
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208 | * The JSON Schema for the field |
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209 | * @link https://json-schema.org/understanding-json-schema/ |
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210 | * As of WordPress 5.0, Core currently understands: |
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211 | * * type |
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212 | * * string - not minLength, not maxLength, not pattern |
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213 | * * integer - minimum, maximum, exclusiveMinimum, exclusiveMaximum, not multipleOf |
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214 | * * number - minimum, maximum, exclusiveMinimum, exclusiveMaximum, not multipleOf |
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215 | * * boolean |
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216 | * * null |
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217 | * * object - properties, additionalProperties, not propertyNames, not dependencies, not patternProperties, not required |
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218 | * * array: only lists, not tuples - items, not minItems, not maxItems, not uniqueItems, not contains |
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219 | * * enum |
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220 | * * format |
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221 | * * date-time |
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222 | |||
223 | * * ip |
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224 | * * uri |
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225 | * As of WordPress 5.0, Core does not support: |
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226 | * * Multiple type: `type: [ 'string', 'integer' ]` |
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227 | * * $ref, allOf, anyOf, oneOf, not, const |
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228 | * |
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229 | * @return array |
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230 | */ |
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231 | public function get_schema() { |
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235 | |||
236 | /** |
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237 | * @param array $schema |
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238 | * @param string $context REST API Request context |
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239 | * @return bool |
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240 | */ |
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241 | private function is_valid_for_context( $schema, $context ) { |
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244 | |||
245 | /** |
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246 | * Removes properties that should not appear in the current |
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247 | * request's context |
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248 | * |
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249 | * $context is a Core REST API Framework request attribute that is |
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250 | * always one of: |
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251 | * * view (what you see on the blog) |
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252 | * * edit (what you see in an editor) |
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253 | * * embed (what you see in, e.g., an oembed) |
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254 | * |
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255 | * Fields (and sub-fields, and sub-sub-...) can be flagged for a |
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256 | * set of specific contexts via the field's schema. |
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257 | * |
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258 | * The Core API will filter out top-level fields with the wrong |
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259 | * context, but will not recurse deeply enough into arrays/objects |
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260 | * to remove all levels of sub-fields with the wrong context. |
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261 | * |
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262 | * This function handles that recursion. |
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263 | * |
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264 | * @param mixed $value |
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265 | * @param array $schema |
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266 | * @param string $context REST API Request context |
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267 | * @return mixed Filtered $value |
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268 | */ |
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269 | final function filter_response_by_context( $value, $schema, $context ) { |
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326 | } |
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327 |
If a method or function can return multiple different values and unless you are sure that you only can receive a single value in this context, we recommend to add an additional type check:
If this a common case that PHP Analyzer should handle natively, please let us know by opening an issue.