Complex classes like OutputClassifier 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 OutputClassifier, and based on these observations, apply Extract Interface, too.
1 | <?php |
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11 | class OutputClassifier |
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12 | { |
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13 | const PAYTOPUBKEY = 'pubkey'; |
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14 | const PAYTOPUBKEYHASH = 'pubkeyhash'; |
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15 | const PAYTOSCRIPTHASH = 'scripthash'; |
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16 | const WITNESS_V0_KEYHASH = 'witness_v0_keyhash'; |
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17 | const WITNESS_V0_SCRIPTHASH = 'witness_v0_scripthash'; |
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18 | const MULTISIG = 'multisig'; |
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19 | const UNKNOWN = 'unknown'; |
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20 | 340 | const NONSTANDARD = 'nonstandard'; |
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21 | |||
22 | 340 | /** |
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23 | 340 | * @var \BitWasp\Bitcoin\Script\Parser\Operation[] |
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24 | */ |
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25 | private $decoded; |
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26 | |||
27 | /** |
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28 | 202 | * @var ScriptInterface |
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29 | */ |
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30 | 202 | private $script; |
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31 | 160 | ||
32 | /** |
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33 | * @param ScriptInterface $script |
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34 | 60 | */ |
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35 | 60 | public function __construct(ScriptInterface $script) |
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40 | |||
41 | /** |
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42 | 18 | * @param BufferInterface|null $publicKey |
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43 | * @return bool |
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44 | */ |
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45 | public function isPayToPublicKey(& $publicKey = null) |
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62 | 112 | ||
63 | 24 | /** |
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64 | * @param BufferInterface|null $pubKeyHash |
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65 | 112 | * @return bool |
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66 | */ |
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67 | 88 | public function isPayToPublicKeyHash(& $pubKeyHash = null) |
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97 | |||
98 | /** |
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99 | * @param BufferInterface|null $scriptHash |
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100 | 172 | * @return bool |
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101 | */ |
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102 | 172 | public function isPayToScriptHash(& $scriptHash = null) |
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127 | |||
128 | /** |
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129 | * @param BufferInterface[] $keys |
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130 | 102 | * @return bool |
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131 | */ |
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132 | 102 | public function isMultisig(& $keys = []) |
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165 | |||
166 | /** |
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167 | * @param BufferInterface $programHash |
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168 | * @return bool |
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169 | */ |
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170 | public function isWitness(& $programHash = null) |
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198 | |||
199 | /** |
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200 | * @param BufferInterface|BufferInterface[] $solutions |
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201 | * @return string |
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202 | */ |
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203 | public function classify(&$solutions = null) |
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232 | } |
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233 |
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: