Conditions | 1 |
Paths | 1 |
Total Lines | 70 |
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Ratio | 0 % |
Changes | 0 |
Small methods make your code easier to understand, in particular if combined with a good name. Besides, if your method is small, finding a good name is usually much easier.
For example, if you find yourself adding comments to a method's body, this is usually a good sign to extract the commented part to a new method, and use the comment as a starting point when coming up with a good name for this new method.
Commonly applied refactorings include:
If many parameters/temporary variables are present:
1 | <?php //phpcs:ignore WordPress.Files.FileName.InvalidClassFileName |
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86 | public function rule_provider() { |
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87 | /** |
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88 | * Data format. |
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89 | * |
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90 | * Param 1 -> section |
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91 | * Param 2 -> rule |
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92 | * Param 3 -> password |
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93 | * Param 4 -> expected_result |
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94 | * Param 5 -> output_message |
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95 | */ |
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96 | |||
97 | return array( |
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98 | 'no_backslashes' => array( |
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99 | 'preg_match', |
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100 | 'no_backslashes', |
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101 | 'abc123', |
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102 | true, |
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103 | 'Passwords may not contain the character "\".', |
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104 | ), |
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105 | 'minimum_length' => array( |
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106 | 'preg_match', |
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107 | 'minimum_length', |
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108 | 'abc123', |
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109 | true, |
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110 | 'Password must be at least 6 characters.', |
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111 | ), |
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112 | 'has_mixed_case' => array( |
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113 | 'preg_match', |
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114 | 'has_mixed_case', |
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115 | 'Abc123', |
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116 | true, |
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117 | 'Password must have mixed case characters.', |
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118 | ), |
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119 | 'has_digit' => array( |
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120 | 'preg_match', |
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121 | 'has_digit', |
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122 | 'abc123', |
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123 | true, |
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124 | 'Password must have digits.', |
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125 | ), |
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126 | 'has_special_char' => array( |
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127 | 'preg_match', |
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128 | 'has_special_char', |
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129 | 'abc!def', |
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130 | true, |
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131 | 'Password must have special characters.', |
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132 | ), |
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133 | 'compare_to_list_1' => array( |
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134 | 'compare_to_list', |
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135 | 'not_a_common_password', |
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136 | 'password', |
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137 | false, |
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138 | 'Common passwords that should not be used.', |
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139 | ), |
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140 | 'compare_to_list_2' => array( |
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141 | 'compare_to_list', |
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142 | 'not_a_common_password', |
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143 | 'hunter2', |
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144 | true, |
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145 | 'Common passwords that should not be used.', |
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146 | ), |
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147 | 'compare_to_list_3' => array( |
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148 | 'compare_to_list', |
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149 | 'not_same_as_other_user_data', |
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150 | 'test-user', |
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151 | false, |
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152 | 'Password contains user data.', |
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153 | ), |
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154 | ); |
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155 | } |
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156 | } |
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157 |
It seems like the type of the argument is not accepted by the function/method which you are calling.
In some cases, in particular if PHP’s automatic type-juggling kicks in this might be fine. In other cases, however this might be a bug.
We suggest to add an explicit type cast like in the following example: