for testing and deploying your application
for finding and fixing issues
for empowering human code reviews
<?php
namespace App\Port\Loader\Loaders;
use App;
use Illuminate\Foundation\AliasLoader;
/**
* Class AliasesLoaderTrait.
*
* @author Mahmoud Zalt <[email protected]>
*/
trait AliasesLoaderTrait
{
* @param array $aliases
public function loadPortInternalAliases(array $aliases = [])
foreach ($aliases as $aliasKey => $aliasValue) {
if (class_exists($aliasValue)) {
$this->loadAlias($aliasKey, $aliasValue);
}
* @param $aliasKey
* @param $aliasValue
private function loadAlias($aliasKey, $aliasValue)
AliasLoader::getInstance()->alias($aliasKey, $aliasValue);
* loadContainersInternalAliases
public function loadContainersInternalAliases()
foreach ($this->containerAliases as $aliasKey => $aliasValue) {
containerAliases
In PHP it is possible to write to properties without declaring them. For example, the following is perfectly valid PHP code:
class MyClass { } $x = new MyClass(); $x->foo = true;
Generally, it is a good practice to explictly declare properties to avoid accidental typos and provide IDE auto-completion:
class MyClass { public $foo; } $x = new MyClass(); $x->foo = true;
In PHP it is possible to write to properties without declaring them. For example, the following is perfectly valid PHP code:
Generally, it is a good practice to explictly declare properties to avoid accidental typos and provide IDE auto-completion: