1 | <?php |
||
17 | trait PageTrait |
||
18 | { |
||
19 | /** |
||
20 | * Get argument value. |
||
21 | * |
||
22 | * @param string $name |
||
23 | * |
||
24 | * @return null|string |
||
25 | */ |
||
26 | abstract protected function getArgumentValue($name); |
||
27 | |||
28 | /** |
||
29 | * Set argument. |
||
30 | * |
||
31 | * @param string $argument |
||
32 | * |
||
33 | * @return $this |
||
34 | */ |
||
35 | abstract protected function setArgument($argument); |
||
36 | |||
37 | /** |
||
38 | * Get FirstPage parameter value |
||
39 | * |
||
40 | * @return string|null |
||
41 | */ |
||
42 | public function getFirstPage() |
||
46 | |||
47 | /** |
||
48 | * Set FirstPage parameter |
||
49 | * Begins processing on the designated page of the document. |
||
50 | * |
||
51 | * @param int $firstPage. |
||
|
|||
52 | * |
||
53 | * @return $this |
||
54 | */ |
||
55 | public function setFirstPage($firstPage) |
||
61 | |||
62 | /** |
||
63 | * Get LastPage parameter value |
||
64 | * |
||
65 | * @return string|null |
||
66 | */ |
||
67 | public function getLastPage() |
||
71 | |||
72 | /** |
||
73 | * Set LastPage parameter |
||
74 | * Stops processing after the designated page of the document. |
||
75 | * |
||
76 | * @param int $lastPage. |
||
77 | * |
||
78 | * @return $this |
||
79 | */ |
||
80 | public function setLastPage($lastPage) |
||
86 | |||
87 | /** |
||
88 | * TODO |
||
89 | * |
||
90 | * -dFIXEDMEDIA |
||
91 | * Causes the media size to be fixed after initialization, forcing pages of other sizes or orientations to be |
||
92 | * clipped. This may be useful when printing documents on a printer that can handle their requested paper size |
||
93 | * but whose default is some other size. Note that -g automatically sets -dFIXEDMEDIA, but -sPAPERSIZE= does |
||
94 | * not. |
||
95 | * |
||
96 | * -dFIXEDRESOLUTION |
||
97 | * Causes the media resolution to be fixed similarly. -r automatically sets -dFIXEDRESOLUTION. |
||
98 | * |
||
99 | * -dPSFitPage |
||
100 | * The page size from the PostScript file setpagedevice operator, or one of the older statusdict page size |
||
101 | * operators (such as letter or a4) will be rotated, scaled and centered on the "best fit" page size from those |
||
102 | * availiable in the InputAttributes list. The -dPSFitPage is most easily used to fit pages when used with the |
||
103 | * -dFIXEDMEDIA option. |
||
104 | * |
||
105 | * This option is also set by the -dFitPage option. |
||
106 | * |
||
107 | * -dORIENT1=true |
||
108 | * -dORIENT1=false |
||
109 | * Defines the meaning of the 0 and 1 orientation values for the setpage[params] compatibility operators. The |
||
110 | * default value of ORIENT1 is true (set in gs_init.ps), which is the correct value for most files that use |
||
111 | * setpage[params] at all, namely, files produced by badly designed applications that "know" that the output |
||
112 | * will be printed on certain roll-media printers: these applications use 0 to mean landscape and 1 to mean |
||
113 | * portrait. -dORIENT1=false declares that 0 means portrait and 1 means landscape, which is the convention used |
||
114 | * by a smaller number of files produced by properly written applications. |
||
115 | * |
||
116 | * -dDEVICEWIDTHPOINTS=w |
||
117 | * -dDEVICEHEIGHTPOINTS=h |
||
118 | * Sets the initial page width to w or initial page height to h respectively, specified in 1/72" units. |
||
119 | * |
||
120 | * -sDEFAULTPAPERSIZE=a4 |
||
121 | * This value will be used to replace the device default papersize ONLY if the default papersize for the device |
||
122 | * is 'letter' or 'a4' serving to insulate users of A4 or 8.5x11 from particular device defaults (the |
||
123 | * collection of contributed drivers in Ghostscript vary as to the default size). |
||
124 | * |
||
125 | * -dFitPage |
||
126 | * This is a "convenience" operator that sets the various options to perform page fitting for specific file |
||
127 | * types. |
||
128 | * |
||
129 | * This option sets the -dEPSFitPage, -dPDFFitPage, and the -dFitPage options. |
||
130 | */ |
||
131 | } |
||
132 |
This check looks for PHPDoc comments describing methods or function parameters that do not exist on the corresponding method or function. It has, however, found a similar but not annotated parameter which might be a good fit.
Consider the following example. The parameter
$ireland
is not defined by the methodfinale(...)
.The most likely cause is that the parameter was changed, but the annotation was not.