Completed
Push — master ( 3e0714...50ebf9 )
by Gabriel
09:17
created

Helpers   A

Complexity

Total Complexity 3

Size/Duplication

Total Lines 14
Duplicated Lines 0 %

Coupling/Cohesion

Components 0
Dependencies 0

Test Coverage

Coverage 75%

Importance

Changes 0
Metric Value
wmc 3
lcom 0
cbo 0
dl 0
loc 14
ccs 3
cts 4
cp 0.75
rs 10
c 0
b 0
f 0

1 Method

Rating   Name   Duplication   Size   Complexity  
A author() 0 8 3
1
<?php
2
3
namespace ByTIC\DocumentGenerator;
4
5
/**
6
 * Class Helpers
7
 * @package ByTIC\DocumentGenerator
8
 */
9
class Helpers
10
{
11
    /**
12
     * @return string
13
     */
14 1
    public static function author()
15
    {
16 1
        if (!function_exists('app') or !app()->has('config')) {
0 ignored issues
show
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.

Loading history...
17 1
            return 'bytic';
18
        }
19
20
        return app('config')->get('SITE.name');
21
    }
22
}
23