The class Kunstmaan\TranslatorBund...ice\Command\DiffCommand has been deprecated with message: This class is deprecated since KunstmaanTranslatorBundle 5.2 and will be removed in 6.0.
This class, trait or interface has been deprecated. The supplier of the file has supplied an explanatory message.
The explanatory message should give you some clue as to whether and when the type will be
removed from the class and what other constant to use instead.
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{
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protected function configure()
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{
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parent::configure();
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$this
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->setName('kuma:translator:migrations:diff')
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->addOption('em', null, InputOption::VALUE_OPTIONAL, 'The entity manager to use for this command.')
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;
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}
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public function execute(InputInterface $input, OutputInterface $output)
$this->getApplication() is of type null|object<Symfony\Comp...nt\Console\Application>, but the function expects a object<Symfony\Bundle\Fr...le\Console\Application>.
It seems like the type of the argument is not accepted by the function/method
which you are calling.
In some cases, in particular if PHP’s automatic type-juggling kicks in this
might be fine. In other cases, however this might be a bug.
We suggest to add an explicit type cast like in the following example:
functionacceptsInteger($int){}$x='123';// string "123"// Instead ofacceptsInteger($x);// we recommend to useacceptsInteger((integer)$x);
It seems like you code against a specific sub-type and not the parent class Symfony\Component\Console\Application as the method getKernel() does only exist in the following sub-classes of Symfony\Component\Console\Application: Symfony\Bundle\FrameworkBundle\Console\Application. Maybe you want to instanceof check for one of these explicitly?
Let’s take a look at an example:
abstractclassUser{/** @return string */abstractpublicfunctiongetPassword();}classMyUserextendsUser{publicfunctiongetPassword(){// return something}publicfunctiongetDisplayName(){// return some name.}}classAuthSystem{publicfunctionauthenticate(User$user){$this->logger->info(sprintf('Authenticating %s.',$user->getDisplayName()));// do something.}}
In the above example, the authenticate() method works fine as long as you just pass
instances of MyUser. However, if you now also want to pass a different sub-classes
of User which does not have a getDisplayName() method, the code will break.
classAuthSystem{publicfunctionauthenticate(User$user){if($userinstanceofMyUser){$this->logger->info(/** ... */);}// or alternativelyif(!$userinstanceofMyUser){thrownew\LogicException('$user must be an instance of MyUser, '.'other instances are not supported.');}}}
Note: PHP Analyzer uses reverse abstract interpretation to narrow down the types
inside the if block in such a case.
This class, trait or interface has been deprecated. The supplier of the file has supplied an explanatory message.
The explanatory message should give you some clue as to whether and when the type will be removed from the class and what other constant to use instead.