Completed
Pull Request — master (#8)
by Michael
02:48
created

MylinksThumbPlugin::setAttribution()

Size

Total Lines 1

Duplication

Lines 0
Ratio 0 %

Importance

Changes 0
Metric Value
dl 0
loc 1
c 0
b 0
f 0
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<?php
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Coding Style Compatibility introduced by
For compatibility and reusability of your code, PSR1 recommends that a file should introduce either new symbols (like classes, functions, etc.) or have side-effects (like outputting something, or including other files), but not both at the same time. The first symbol is defined on line 24 and the first side effect is on line 13.

The PSR-1: Basic Coding Standard recommends that a file should either introduce new symbols, that is classes, functions, constants or similar, or have side effects. Side effects are anything that executes logic, like for example printing output, changing ini settings or writing to a file.

The idea behind this recommendation is that merely auto-loading a class should not change the state of an application. It also promotes a cleaner style of programming and makes your code less prone to errors, because the logic is not spread out all over the place.

To learn more about the PSR-1, please see the PHP-FIG site on the PSR-1.

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/**
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 *  mylinks Thumb Provider Plugin Interface Class Elements
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 *
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 * @copyright ::  {@link http://xoops.org/ XOOPS Project}
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 * @copyright ::  ZySpec Incorporated
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 * @license   ::    {@link http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-2.0.html GNU Public License}
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 * @package   ::    mylinks
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 * @subpackage:: class
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 * @author    ::     zyspec ([email protected])
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 */
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defined('XOOPS_ROOT_PATH') or die('Restricted access');
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Comprehensibility Best Practice introduced by
Using logical operators such as or instead of || is generally not recommended.

PHP has two types of connecting operators (logical operators, and boolean operators):

  Logical Operators Boolean Operator
AND - meaning and &&
OR - meaning or ||

The difference between these is the order in which they are executed. In most cases, you would want to use a boolean operator like &&, or ||.

Let’s take a look at a few examples:

// Logical operators have lower precedence:
$f = false or true;

// is executed like this:
($f = false) or true;


// Boolean operators have higher precedence:
$f = false || true;

// is executed like this:
$f = (false || true);

Logical Operators are used for Control-Flow

One case where you explicitly want to use logical operators is for control-flow such as this:

$x === 5
    or die('$x must be 5.');

// Instead of
if ($x !== 5) {
    die('$x must be 5.');
}

Since die introduces problems of its own, f.e. it makes our code hardly testable, and prevents any kind of more sophisticated error handling; you probably do not want to use this in real-world code. Unfortunately, logical operators cannot be combined with throw at this point:

// The following is currently a parse error.
$x === 5
    or throw new RuntimeException('$x must be 5.');

These limitations lead to logical operators rarely being of use in current PHP code.

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/**
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 * MylinksThumbPluginInterface
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 *
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 * @package   ::   mylinks
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 * @author    ::    zyspec ([email protected]), Herve Thouzard
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 * @copyright ::  {@link http://xoops.org/ XOOPS Project}
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 * @copyright :: Copyright (c) 2012 ZySpec Incorporated, Herve Thouzard
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 * @access::    public
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 */
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interface MylinksThumbPlugin
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Coding Style Compatibility introduced by
Each interface must be in a namespace of at least one level (a top-level vendor name)

You can fix this by adding a namespace to your class:

namespace YourVendor;

class YourClass { }

When choosing a vendor namespace, try to pick something that is not too generic to avoid conflicts with other libraries.

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{
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    public function getProviderUrl();
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Documentation introduced by
For interfaces and abstract methods it is generally a good practice to add a @return annotation even if it is just @return void or @return null, so that implementors know what to do in the overridden method.

For interface and abstract methods, it is impossible to infer the return type from the immediate code. In these cases, it is generally advisible to explicitly annotate these methods with a @return doc comment to communicate to implementors of these methods what they are expected to return.

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    public function getProviderName();
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Documentation introduced by
For interfaces and abstract methods it is generally a good practice to add a @return annotation even if it is just @return void or @return null, so that implementors know what to do in the overridden method.

For interface and abstract methods, it is impossible to infer the return type from the immediate code. In these cases, it is generally advisible to explicitly annotate these methods with a @return doc comment to communicate to implementors of these methods what they are expected to return.

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    /**
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     * @param $szarray
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     * @return mixed
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     */
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    public function setShotSize($szarray);
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    public function getShotSize();
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Documentation introduced by
For interfaces and abstract methods it is generally a good practice to add a @return annotation even if it is just @return void or @return null, so that implementors know what to do in the overridden method.

For interface and abstract methods, it is impossible to infer the return type from the immediate code. In these cases, it is generally advisible to explicitly annotate these methods with a @return doc comment to communicate to implementors of these methods what they are expected to return.

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    /**
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     * @param $url
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     * @return mixed
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     */
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    public function setSiteUrl($url);
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    public function getSiteUrl();
0 ignored issues
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Documentation introduced by
For interfaces and abstract methods it is generally a good practice to add a @return annotation even if it is just @return void or @return null, so that implementors know what to do in the overridden method.

For interface and abstract methods, it is impossible to infer the return type from the immediate code. In these cases, it is generally advisible to explicitly annotate these methods with a @return doc comment to communicate to implementors of these methods what they are expected to return.

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    public function setAttribution();
0 ignored issues
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Documentation introduced by
For interfaces and abstract methods it is generally a good practice to add a @return annotation even if it is just @return void or @return null, so that implementors know what to do in the overridden method.

For interface and abstract methods, it is impossible to infer the return type from the immediate code. In these cases, it is generally advisible to explicitly annotate these methods with a @return doc comment to communicate to implementors of these methods what they are expected to return.

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    public function getAttribution();
0 ignored issues
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Documentation introduced by
For interfaces and abstract methods it is generally a good practice to add a @return annotation even if it is just @return void or @return null, so that implementors know what to do in the overridden method.

For interface and abstract methods, it is impossible to infer the return type from the immediate code. In these cases, it is generally advisible to explicitly annotate these methods with a @return doc comment to communicate to implementors of these methods what they are expected to return.

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    /**
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     * @param $key
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     * @return mixed
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     */
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    public function setProviderPublicKey($key);
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    public function getProviderPublicKey();
0 ignored issues
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Documentation introduced by
For interfaces and abstract methods it is generally a good practice to add a @return annotation even if it is just @return void or @return null, so that implementors know what to do in the overridden method.

For interface and abstract methods, it is impossible to infer the return type from the immediate code. In these cases, it is generally advisible to explicitly annotate these methods with a @return doc comment to communicate to implementors of these methods what they are expected to return.

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    /**
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     * @param $key
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     * @return mixed
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     */
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    public function setProviderPrivateKey($key);
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    public function getProviderPrivateKey();
0 ignored issues
show
Documentation introduced by
For interfaces and abstract methods it is generally a good practice to add a @return annotation even if it is just @return void or @return null, so that implementors know what to do in the overridden method.

For interface and abstract methods, it is impossible to infer the return type from the immediate code. In these cases, it is generally advisible to explicitly annotate these methods with a @return doc comment to communicate to implementors of these methods what they are expected to return.

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}
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