Conditions | 5 |
Paths | 6 |
Total Lines | 54 |
Code Lines | 36 |
Lines | 0 |
Ratio | 0 % |
Changes | 1 | ||
Bugs | 0 | Features | 1 |
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 |
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136 | public function fromParser(Parser $parser) |
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137 | { |
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138 | $math = Bitcoin::getMath(); |
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139 | $int32le = new Int32($math, ByteOrder::LE); |
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140 | $uint32le = new Uint32($math, ByteOrder::LE); |
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141 | |||
142 | $varint = new VarInt($math, ByteOrder::LE); |
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143 | $inputsSerializer = new Vector($varint, function (Parser $parser) { |
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144 | return $this->inputSerializer->fromParser($parser); |
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145 | }); |
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146 | $flagsSerializer = new Uint8($math, ByteOrder::BE); |
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147 | $outputsSerializer = new Vector($varint, function (Parser $parser) { |
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148 | return $this->outputSerializer->fromParser($parser); |
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149 | }); |
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150 | |||
151 | $vcharSerializer = new VarString($varint); |
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152 | $witnessSerializer = new Vector($varint, function (Parser $parser) use ($vcharSerializer) { |
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153 | return $vcharSerializer->read($parser); |
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154 | }); |
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155 | |||
156 | $version = $int32le->read($parser); |
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157 | $dummy = (int) $flagsSerializer->read($parser); |
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158 | if ($dummy !== 0) { |
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159 | throw new \RuntimeException('Non-zero dummy in witness-bearing transaction'); |
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160 | } |
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161 | |||
162 | $flags = (int) $flagsSerializer->read($parser); |
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163 | if ($math->cmp($flags, 0) != 0) { |
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164 | $vInputs = $inputsSerializer->read($parser); |
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165 | $vOutputs = $outputsSerializer->read($parser); |
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166 | } else { |
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167 | throw new \RuntimeException('Unknown flag'); |
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168 | } |
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169 | |||
170 | $vWitness = []; |
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171 | if ($flags & 1) { |
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172 | $flags ^= 1; |
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173 | $vWitness = $witnessSerializer->read($parser); |
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174 | } |
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175 | |||
176 | if ($flags) { |
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177 | throw new \RuntimeException('Unknown optional data'); |
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178 | } |
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179 | |||
180 | $locktime = $uint32le->read($parser); |
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181 | |||
182 | return new Transaction( |
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183 | $version, |
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184 | new TransactionInputCollection($vInputs), |
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185 | new TransactionOutputCollection($vOutputs), |
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186 | new TransactionWitnessCollection($vWitness), |
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187 | $locktime |
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188 | ); |
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189 | } |
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190 | |||
201 |
In PHP it is possible to write to properties without declaring them. For example, the following is perfectly valid PHP code:
Generally, it is a good practice to explictly declare properties to avoid accidental typos and provide IDE auto-completion: