| Conditions | 1 |
| Paths | 1 |
| Total Lines | 16 |
| Code Lines | 11 |
| Lines | 0 |
| Ratio | 0 % |
| Changes | 1 | ||
| Bugs | 0 | Features | 0 |
| 1 | <?php |
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| 21 | public function createStripeAccount(CreateStripeAccountRequest $request, CreateStripeAccountAction $action) |
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| 22 | { |
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| 23 | $stripeAccount = $action->run( |
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| 24 | $request->user(), |
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| 25 | $request->customer_id, |
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| 26 | $request->card_id, |
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| 27 | $request->card_funding, |
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| 28 | $request->card_last_digits, |
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| 29 | $request->card_fingerprint |
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| 30 | ); |
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| 31 | |||
| 32 | return $this->response->accepted(null, [ |
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| 33 | 'message' => 'Stripe account created successfully.', |
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| 34 | 'stripe_account_id' => $stripeAccount->id, |
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| 35 | ]); |
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| 36 | } |
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| 37 | |||
| 39 |
Since your code implements the magic getter
_get, this function will be called for any read access on an undefined variable. You can add the@propertyannotation to your class or interface to document the existence of this variable.If the property has read access only, you can use the @property-read annotation instead.
Of course, you may also just have mistyped another name, in which case you should fix the error.
See also the PhpDoc documentation for @property.