Conditions | 5 |
Paths | 5 |
Total Lines | 17 |
Code Lines | 10 |
Lines | 0 |
Ratio | 0 % |
Changes | 0 |
1 | <?php |
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67 | public function getUserInfo(UserAccount $userAccount, array $claims, array $claimLocales): array |
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68 | { |
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69 | $result = []; |
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70 | $claimLocale[] = null; |
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71 | foreach ($claims as $claimName => $config) { |
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72 | if ($this->has($claimName)) { |
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73 | $claim = $this->get($claimName); |
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74 | foreach ($claimLocales as $claimLocale) { |
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75 | if ($claim->isAvailableForUserAccount($userAccount, $claimLocale)) { |
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76 | $result[$claimName] = $claim->getForUserAccount($userAccount, $claimLocale); |
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77 | } |
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78 | } |
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79 | } |
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80 | } |
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81 | |||
82 | return $result; |
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83 | } |
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84 | } |
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85 |
Adding an explicit array definition is generally preferable to implicit array definition as it guarantees a stable state of the code.
Let’s take a look at an example:
As you can see in this example, the array
$myArray
is initialized the first time when the foreach loop is entered. You can also see that the value of thebar
key is only written conditionally; thus, its value might result from a previous iteration.This might or might not be intended. To make your intention clear, your code more readible and to avoid accidental bugs, we recommend to add an explicit initialization $myArray = array() either outside or inside the foreach loop.