Completed
Branch v2.0.0 (f654ea)
by Alexander
01:15
created

UserUniqueEmailSpecification::__construct()   A

Complexity

Conditions 1
Paths 1

Size

Total Lines 4

Duplication

Lines 0
Ratio 0 %

Importance

Changes 0
Metric Value
dl 0
loc 4
rs 10
c 0
b 0
f 0
cc 1
nc 1
nop 1
1
<?php
2
3
namespace Domain\User\Specifications;
4
5
use Domain\User\Exceptions\UserSpecificationException;
6
use Domain\User\User;
7
use Domain\User\UserRepository;
8
9
class UserUniqueEmailSpecification
10
{
11
    public function __construct(User $user)
12
    {
13
        $this->user = $user;
0 ignored issues
show
Bug introduced by
The property user does not exist. Did you maybe forget to declare it?

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;
Loading history...
14
    }
15
16
    public function validate()
17
    {
18
        $repository = new UserRepository();
19
        $existingUser = $repository->fetchUserModelByEmail($this->user->getEmail());
20
        if ($existingUser) {
21
            if ($this->user->getId() !== $existingUser->getId()) {
22
                throw new UserSpecificationException("Email {$existingUser->getEmail()} already exists in the system.");
23
            }
24
        }
25
    }
26
}
27