| Conditions | 5 | 
| Paths | 4 | 
| Total Lines | 22 | 
| Code Lines | 15 | 
| Lines | 0 | 
| Ratio | 0 % | 
| Changes | 1 | ||
| Bugs | 1 | Features | 0 | 
| 1 | <?php | ||
| 7 | public function __construct($metric_class, $var, $help, $labels) | ||
| 8 |     { | ||
| 9 |         if (!preg_match('/^[a-zA-Z_:][a-zA-Z0-9_:]*$/', $var)) { | ||
| 10 | throw new Exceptions\InvalidName(sprintf( | ||
| 11 | "Metric name '%s' is invalid", | ||
| 12 | $var | ||
| 13 | )); | ||
| 14 | } | ||
| 15 |         foreach ($labels as $label) { | ||
| 16 |             if (!preg_match('/^[a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z0-9_]*$/', $label) | ||
| 17 |                 or substr($label, 0, 4) === "__") { | ||
|  | |||
| 18 | throw new Exceptions\InvalidName(sprintf( | ||
| 19 | "Label name '%s' is invalid", | ||
| 20 | $label | ||
| 21 | )); | ||
| 22 | } | ||
| 23 | } | ||
| 24 | $this->metric_class = "Aptarus\\PromClient\\" . $metric_class; | ||
| 25 | $this->var = $var; | ||
| 26 | $this->help = $help; | ||
| 27 | $this->labels = $labels; | ||
| 28 | } | ||
| 29 | |||
| 49 | 
PHP has two types of connecting operators (logical operators, and boolean operators):
and&&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 are used for Control-Flow
One case where you explicitly want to use logical operators is for control-flow such as this:
Since
dieintroduces 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 withthrowat this point:These limitations lead to logical operators rarely being of use in current PHP code.