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1 | <?php |
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2 | |||
3 | namespace Kunstmaan\AdminListBundle\AdminList\FilterType; |
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4 | |||
5 | use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Request; |
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6 | |||
7 | /** |
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8 | * FilterTypeInterface |
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9 | */ |
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10 | interface FilterTypeInterface |
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11 | { |
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12 | /** |
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13 | * @param Request $request The request |
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14 | * @param array &$data The data |
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15 | * @param string $uniqueId The unique identifier |
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16 | */ |
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17 | public function bindRequest(Request $request, array &$data, $uniqueId); |
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18 | |||
19 | /** |
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20 | * @param array $data Data |
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21 | * @param string $uniqueId The identifier |
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22 | */ |
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23 | public function apply(array $data, $uniqueId); |
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For interfaces and abstract methods it is generally a good practice to add a
@return annotation even if it is just @return void or @return null , so that implementors know what to do in the overridden method.
For interface and abstract methods, it is impossible to infer the return type
from the immediate code. In these cases, it is generally advisible to explicitly
annotate these methods with a
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24 | |||
25 | /** |
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26 | * @return string |
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27 | */ |
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28 | public function getTemplate(); |
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29 | } |
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30 |
For interface and abstract methods, it is impossible to infer the return type from the immediate code. In these cases, it is generally advisible to explicitly annotate these methods with a
@return
doc comment to communicate to implementors of these methods what they are expected to return.