Total Complexity | 2 |
Total Lines | 34 |
Duplicated Lines | 0 % |
Changes | 0 |
1 | <?php |
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11 | final class AddCestTest extends TestCase |
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12 | { |
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13 | public function testExecuteDryRun() |
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14 | { |
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15 | $writer = $this->prophesize(WriteInterface::class); |
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16 | $tester = new CommandTester(new AddTestCommand(null, $writer->reveal())); |
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17 | $tester->execute([ |
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18 | 'entity' => Hubby::class, |
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19 | ]); |
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20 | |||
21 | $display = $tester->getDisplay(); |
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22 | |||
23 | $this->assertContains('AddCest', $display); |
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24 | } |
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25 | |||
26 | public function testExecuteForce() |
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27 | { |
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28 | $writer = new class implements WriteInterface { |
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29 | public $content = ''; |
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30 | |||
31 | public function write(string $content, string $fileName): void |
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34 | } |
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35 | }; |
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45 | } |
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46 | } |
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47 |
Classes in PHP are usually named in CamelCase.
In camelCase names are written without any punctuation, the start of each new word being marked by a capital letter. The whole name starts with a capital letter as well.
Thus the name database provider becomes
DatabaseProvider
.