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ManageController::moveAction()   B

Complexity

Conditions 2
Paths 2

Size

Total Lines 24
Code Lines 15

Duplication

Lines 0
Ratio 0 %

Importance

Changes 3
Bugs 1 Features 0
Metric Value
c 3
b 1
f 0
dl 0
loc 24
rs 8.9713
cc 2
eloc 15
nc 2
nop 0
1
<?php
2
/**
3
 * YAWIK
4
 *
5
 * @filesource
6
 * @copyright (c) 2013 - 2016 Cross Solution (http://cross-solution.de)
7
 * @license   MIT
8
 */
9
10
/** Applications controller */
11
namespace Applications\Controller;
12
13
use Applications\Listener\Events\ApplicationEvent;
14
use Zend\Mvc\Controller\AbstractActionController;
15
use Zend\View\Model\ViewModel;
16
use Zend\View\Model\JsonModel;
17
use Applications\Entity\StatusInterface as Status;
18
use Applications\Entity\Application;
19
20
/**
21
 * @method \Core\Controller\Plugin\Notification notification()
22
 * @method \Core\Controller\Plugin\Mailer mailer()
23
 * @method \Acl\Controller\Plugin\Acl acl()
24
 * @method \Auth\Controller\Plugin\Auth auth()
25
 *
26
 * Handles managing actions on applications
27
 */
28
class ManageController extends AbstractActionController
29
{
30
    /**
31
     * attaches further Listeners for generating / processing the output
32
     *
33
     * @return $this
34
     */
35
    public function attachDefaultListeners()
36
    {
37
        parent::attachDefaultListeners();
38
        $serviceLocator  = $this->serviceLocator;
39
        $defaultServices = $serviceLocator->get('DefaultListeners');
40
        $events          = $this->getEventManager();
41
        $events->attach($defaultServices);
0 ignored issues
show
Documentation introduced by
$defaultServices is of type object|array, but the function expects a string.

It seems like the type of the argument is not accepted by the function/method which you are calling.

In some cases, in particular if PHP’s automatic type-juggling kicks in this might be fine. In other cases, however this might be a bug.

We suggest to add an explicit type cast like in the following example:

function acceptsInteger($int) { }

$x = '123'; // string "123"

// Instead of
acceptsInteger($x);

// we recommend to use
acceptsInteger((integer) $x);
Loading history...
42
        return $this;
43
    }
44
45
    /**
46
     * (non-PHPdoc)
47
     * @see \Zend\Mvc\Controller\AbstractActionController::onDispatch()
48
     */
49
    public function onDispatch(\Zend\Mvc\MvcEvent $e)
50
    {
51
        $routeMatch = $e->getRouteMatch();
52
        $action     = $this->params()->fromQuery('action');
53
        
54
        if ($routeMatch && $action) {
55
            $routeMatch->setParam('action', $action);
56
        }
57
58
        return parent::onDispatch($e);
59
    }
60
    
61
    /**
62
     * List applications
63
     */
64
    public function indexAction()
65
    {
66
        $services              = $this->serviceLocator;
67
        /* @var \Jobs\Repository\Job $jobRepository */
68
        $jobRepository         = $services->get('repositories')->get('Jobs/Job');
69
        /* @var \Applications\Repository\Application $applicationRepository */
70
        $applicationRepository = $services->get('repositories')->get('Applications/Application');
71
        $services_form         = $services->get('forms');
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
$services_form does not seem to conform to the naming convention (^[a-z][a-zA-Z0-9]*$).

This check examines a number of code elements and verifies that they conform to the given naming conventions.

You can set conventions for local variables, abstract classes, utility classes, constant, properties, methods, parameters, interfaces, classes, exceptions and special methods.

Loading history...
72
        /* @var \Applications\Form\FilterApplication $form */
73
        $form                  = $services_form->get('Applications/Filter');
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
$services_form does not seem to conform to the naming convention (^[a-z][a-zA-Z0-9]*$).

This check examines a number of code elements and verifies that they conform to the given naming conventions.

You can set conventions for local variables, abstract classes, utility classes, constant, properties, methods, parameters, interfaces, classes, exceptions and special methods.

Loading history...
74
        $params                = $this->getRequest()->getQuery();
0 ignored issues
show
Bug introduced by
It seems like you code against a concrete implementation and not the interface Zend\Stdlib\RequestInterface as the method getQuery() does only exist in the following implementations of said interface: Zend\Http\PhpEnvironment\Request, Zend\Http\Request.

Let’s take a look at an example:

interface User
{
    /** @return string */
    public function getPassword();
}

class MyUser implements User
{
    public function getPassword()
    {
        // return something
    }

    public function getDisplayName()
    {
        // return some name.
    }
}

class AuthSystem
{
    public function authenticate(User $user)
    {
        $this->logger->info(sprintf('Authenticating %s.', $user->getDisplayName()));
        // do something.
    }
}

In the above example, the authenticate() method works fine as long as you just pass instances of MyUser. However, if you now also want to pass a different implementation of User which does not have a getDisplayName() method, the code will break.

Available Fixes

  1. Change the type-hint for the parameter:

    class AuthSystem
    {
        public function authenticate(MyUser $user) { /* ... */ }
    }
    
  2. Add an additional type-check:

    class AuthSystem
    {
        public function authenticate(User $user)
        {
            if ($user instanceof MyUser) {
                $this->logger->info(/** ... */);
            }
    
            // or alternatively
            if ( ! $user instanceof MyUser) {
                throw new \LogicException(
                    '$user must be an instance of MyUser, '
                   .'other instances are not supported.'
                );
            }
    
        }
    }
    
Note: PHP Analyzer uses reverse abstract interpretation to narrow down the types inside the if block in such a case.
  1. Add the method to the interface:

    interface User
    {
        /** @return string */
        public function getPassword();
    
        /** @return string */
        public function getDisplayName();
    }
    
Loading history...
75
        /* @var \Zend\Form\Element\Select $statusElement */
76
        $statusElement         = $form->get('status');
77
78
        $states                = $applicationRepository->getStates()->toArray();
79
        $states                = array_merge(array(/*@translate*/ 'all'), $states);
80
        
81
        $statesForSelections = array();
82
        foreach ($states as $state) {
83
            $statesForSelections[$state] = $state;
84
        }
85
        $statusElement->setValueOptions($statesForSelections);
86
        
87
        $job = $params->job ? $jobRepository->find($params->job)  : null;
88
        $paginator = $this->paginator('Applications');
0 ignored issues
show
Documentation Bug introduced by
The method paginator does not exist on object<Applications\Controller\ManageController>? Since you implemented __call, maybe consider adding a @method annotation.

If you implement __call and you know which methods are available, you can improve IDE auto-completion and static analysis by adding a @method annotation to the class.

This is often the case, when __call is implemented by a parent class and only the child class knows which methods exist:

class ParentClass {
    private $data = array();

    public function __call($method, array $args) {
        if (0 === strpos($method, 'get')) {
            return $this->data[strtolower(substr($method, 3))];
        }

        throw new \LogicException(sprintf('Unsupported method: %s', $method));
    }
}

/**
 * If this class knows which fields exist, you can specify the methods here:
 *
 * @method string getName()
 */
class SomeClass extends ParentClass { }
Loading history...
89
90
        if ($job) {
91
            $params['job_title'] = '[' . $job->getApplyId() . '] ' . $job->getTitle();
92
        }
93
94
        $form->bind($params);
95
                
96
        return array(
97
            'form' => $form,
98
            'applications' => $paginator,
99
            'byJobs' => 'jobs' == $params->get('by', 'me'),
100
            'sort' => $params->get('sort', 'none'),
101
            'search' => $params->get('search', ''),
102
            'job' => $job,
103
            'applicationStates' => $states,
104
            'applicationState' => $params->get('status', '')
105
        );
106
    }
107
108
    /**
109
     * Detail view of an application
110
     *
111
     * @return array|JsonModel|ViewModel
112
     */
113
    public function detailAction()
114
    {
115
        if ('refresh-rating' == $this->params()->fromQuery('do')) {
116
            return $this->refreshRatingAction();
117
        }
118
        
119
        $nav = $this->serviceLocator->get('Core/Navigation');
120
        $page = $nav->findByRoute('lang/applications');
121
        $page->setActive();
122
123
        /* @var \Applications\Repository\Application$repository */
124
        $repository = $this->serviceLocator->get('repositories')->get('Applications/Application');
125
        /* @var Application $application */
126
        $application = $repository->find($this->params('id'));
127
        
128
        if (!$application) {
129
            $this->response->setStatusCode(410);
0 ignored issues
show
Bug introduced by
It seems like you code against a concrete implementation and not the interface Zend\Stdlib\ResponseInterface as the method setStatusCode() does only exist in the following implementations of said interface: Zend\Http\PhpEnvironment\Response, Zend\Http\Response, Zend\Http\Response\Stream.

Let’s take a look at an example:

interface User
{
    /** @return string */
    public function getPassword();
}

class MyUser implements User
{
    public function getPassword()
    {
        // return something
    }

    public function getDisplayName()
    {
        // return some name.
    }
}

class AuthSystem
{
    public function authenticate(User $user)
    {
        $this->logger->info(sprintf('Authenticating %s.', $user->getDisplayName()));
        // do something.
    }
}

In the above example, the authenticate() method works fine as long as you just pass instances of MyUser. However, if you now also want to pass a different implementation of User which does not have a getDisplayName() method, the code will break.

Available Fixes

  1. Change the type-hint for the parameter:

    class AuthSystem
    {
        public function authenticate(MyUser $user) { /* ... */ }
    }
    
  2. Add an additional type-check:

    class AuthSystem
    {
        public function authenticate(User $user)
        {
            if ($user instanceof MyUser) {
                $this->logger->info(/** ... */);
            }
    
            // or alternatively
            if ( ! $user instanceof MyUser) {
                throw new \LogicException(
                    '$user must be an instance of MyUser, '
                   .'other instances are not supported.'
                );
            }
    
        }
    }
    
Note: PHP Analyzer uses reverse abstract interpretation to narrow down the types inside the if block in such a case.
  1. Add the method to the interface:

    interface User
    {
        /** @return string */
        public function getPassword();
    
        /** @return string */
        public function getDisplayName();
    }
    
Loading history...
130
            $model = new ViewModel(
131
                array(
132
                'content' => /*@translate*/ 'Invalid apply id'
133
                )
134
            );
135
            $model->setTemplate('applications/error/not-found');
136
            return $model;
137
        }
138
        
139
        $this->acl($application, 'read');
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to ManageController::acl() has too many arguments starting with $application.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
140
        
141
        $applicationIsUnread = false;
142
        if ($application->isUnreadBy($this->auth('id')) && $application->getStatus()) {
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to ManageController::auth() has too many arguments starting with 'id'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
Documentation introduced by
$this->auth('id') is of type object<Auth\Controller\Plugin\Auth>, but the function expects a object<Auth\Entity\UserInterface>|string.

It seems like the type of the argument is not accepted by the function/method which you are calling.

In some cases, in particular if PHP’s automatic type-juggling kicks in this might be fine. In other cases, however this might be a bug.

We suggest to add an explicit type cast like in the following example:

function acceptsInteger($int) { }

$x = '123'; // string "123"

// Instead of
acceptsInteger($x);

// we recommend to use
acceptsInteger((integer) $x);
Loading history...
143
            $application->addReadBy($this->auth('id'));
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to ManageController::auth() has too many arguments starting with 'id'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
Documentation introduced by
$this->auth('id') is of type object<Auth\Controller\Plugin\Auth>, but the function expects a object<Auth\Entity\UserInterface>|string.

It seems like the type of the argument is not accepted by the function/method which you are calling.

In some cases, in particular if PHP’s automatic type-juggling kicks in this might be fine. In other cases, however this might be a bug.

We suggest to add an explicit type cast like in the following example:

function acceptsInteger($int) { }

$x = '123'; // string "123"

// Instead of
acceptsInteger($x);

// we recommend to use
acceptsInteger((integer) $x);
Loading history...
144
            $applicationIsUnread = true;
145
            $application->changeStatus(
146
                $application->getStatus(),
147
                sprintf(/*@translate*/ 'Application was read by %s',
148
                                       $this->auth()->getUser()->getInfo()->getDisplayName()));
149
        }
150
151
152
        
153
        $format=$this->params()->fromQuery('format');
154
155
        if ($application->isDraft()) {
156
            $list = false;
157
        } else {
158
            $list = $this->paginationParams('Applications\Index', $repository);
0 ignored issues
show
Bug introduced by
The method paginationParams() does not exist on Applications\Controller\ManageController. Did you maybe mean params()?

This check marks calls to methods that do not seem to exist on an object.

This is most likely the result of a method being renamed without all references to it being renamed likewise.

Loading history...
159
            $list->setCurrent($application->id);
0 ignored issues
show
Documentation introduced by
The property $id is declared protected in Core\Entity\AbstractIdentifiableEntity. Since you implemented __get(), maybe consider adding a @property or @property-read annotation. This makes it easier for IDEs to provide auto-completion.

Since your code implements the magic setter _set, this function will be called for any write access on an undefined variable. You can add the @property annotation to your class or interface to document the existence of this variable.

<?php

/**
 * @property int $x
 * @property int $y
 * @property string $text
 */
class MyLabel
{
    private $properties;

    private $allowedProperties = array('x', 'y', 'text');

    public function __get($name)
    {
        if (isset($properties[$name]) && in_array($name, $this->allowedProperties)) {
            return $properties[$name];
        } else {
            return null;
        }
    }

    public function __set($name, $value)
    {
        if (in_array($name, $this->allowedProperties)) {
            $properties[$name] = $value;
        } else {
            throw new \LogicException("Property $name is not defined.");
        }
    }

}

Since the property has write access only, you can use the @property-write annotation instead.

Of course, you may also just have mistyped another name, in which case you should fix the error.

See also the PhpDoc documentation for @property.

Loading history...
160
        }
161
162
        $return = array(
163
            'application'=> $application,
164
            'list' => $list,
165
            'isUnread' => $applicationIsUnread,
166
            'format' => 'html'
167
        );
168
        switch ($format) {
169
            case 'json':
170
                /*@deprecated - must be refactored */
171
                        $viewModel = new JsonModel();
172
                        $viewModel->setVariables(
173
                            /*array(
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code Comprehensibility introduced by
67% of this comment could be valid code. Did you maybe forget this after debugging?

Sometimes obsolete code just ends up commented out instead of removed. In this case it is better to remove the code once you have checked you do not need it.

The code might also have been commented out for debugging purposes. In this case it is vital that someone uncomments it again or your project may behave in very unexpected ways in production.

This check looks for comments that seem to be mostly valid code and reports them.

Loading history...
174
                            'application' => */$this->serviceLocator
175
                                              ->get('builders')
176
                                              ->get('JsonApplication')
177
                                              ->unbuild($application)
178
                        );
179
                        $viewModel->setVariable('isUnread', $applicationIsUnread);
180
                        $return = $viewModel;
181
                break;
182
            case 'pdf':
183
                $pdf = $this->serviceLocator->get('Core/html2pdf');
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
$pdf is not used, you could remove the assignment.

This check looks for variable assignements that are either overwritten by other assignments or where the variable is not used subsequently.

$myVar = 'Value';
$higher = false;

if (rand(1, 6) > 3) {
    $higher = true;
} else {
    $higher = false;
}

Both the $myVar assignment in line 1 and the $higher assignment in line 2 are dead. The first because $myVar is never used and the second because $higher is always overwritten for every possible time line.

Loading history...
184
                $return['format'] = $format;
185
                break;
186
            default:
187
                $contentCollector = $this->getPluginManager()->get('Core/ContentCollector');
188
                $contentCollector->setTemplate('applications/manage/details/action-buttons');
0 ignored issues
show
Bug introduced by
The method setTemplate() does not seem to exist on object<Zend\Stdlib\DispatchableInterface>.

This check looks for calls to methods that do not seem to exist on a given type. It looks for the method on the type itself as well as in inherited classes or implemented interfaces.

This is most likely a typographical error or the method has been renamed.

Loading history...
189
                $actionButtons = $contentCollector->trigger('application.detail.actionbuttons', $application);
0 ignored issues
show
Bug introduced by
The method trigger() does not seem to exist on object<Zend\Stdlib\DispatchableInterface>.

This check looks for calls to methods that do not seem to exist on a given type. It looks for the method on the type itself as well as in inherited classes or implemented interfaces.

This is most likely a typographical error or the method has been renamed.

Loading history...
190
                
191
                $return = new ViewModel($return);
192
                $return->addChild($actionButtons, 'externActionButtons');
193
                break;
194
        }
195
        
196
        return $return;
197
    }
198
    
199
    /**
200
     * Refreshes the rating of an application
201
     *
202
     * @throws \DomainException
203
     * @return \Zend\View\Model\ViewModel
204
     */
205
    public function refreshRatingAction()
206
    {
207
        $model = new ViewModel();
208
        $model->setTemplate('applications/manage/_rating');
209
        
210
        $application = $this->serviceLocator->get('repositories')->get('Applications/Application')
211
                        ->find($this->params('id', 0));
212
        
213
        if (!$application) {
214
            throw new \DomainException('Invalid application id.');
215
        }
216
        
217
        $model->setVariable('application', $application);
218
        return $model;
219
    }
220
    
221
    /**
222
     * Attaches a social profile to an application
223
     * @throws \InvalidArgumentException
224
     *
225
     * @return array
226
     */
227
    public function socialProfileAction()
228
    {
229
        if ($spId = $this->params()->fromQuery('spId')) {
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
$spId is not used, you could remove the assignment.

This check looks for variable assignements that are either overwritten by other assignments or where the variable is not used subsequently.

$myVar = 'Value';
$higher = false;

if (rand(1, 6) > 3) {
    $higher = true;
} else {
    $higher = false;
}

Both the $myVar assignment in line 1 and the $higher assignment in line 2 are dead. The first because $myVar is never used and the second because $higher is always overwritten for every possible time line.

Loading history...
230
            $repositories = $this->serviceLocator->get('repositories');
231
            $repo = $repositories->get('Applications/Application');
232
            $profile = $repo->findProfile($this->params()->fromQuery('spId'));
233
            if (!$profile) {
234
                throw new \InvalidArgumentException('Could not find profile.');
235
            }
236
        } elseif ($this->getRequest()->isPost()
0 ignored issues
show
Bug introduced by
It seems like you code against a concrete implementation and not the interface Zend\Stdlib\RequestInterface as the method isPost() does only exist in the following implementations of said interface: Zend\Http\PhpEnvironment\Request, Zend\Http\Request.

Let’s take a look at an example:

interface User
{
    /** @return string */
    public function getPassword();
}

class MyUser implements User
{
    public function getPassword()
    {
        // return something
    }

    public function getDisplayName()
    {
        // return some name.
    }
}

class AuthSystem
{
    public function authenticate(User $user)
    {
        $this->logger->info(sprintf('Authenticating %s.', $user->getDisplayName()));
        // do something.
    }
}

In the above example, the authenticate() method works fine as long as you just pass instances of MyUser. However, if you now also want to pass a different implementation of User which does not have a getDisplayName() method, the code will break.

Available Fixes

  1. Change the type-hint for the parameter:

    class AuthSystem
    {
        public function authenticate(MyUser $user) { /* ... */ }
    }
    
  2. Add an additional type-check:

    class AuthSystem
    {
        public function authenticate(User $user)
        {
            if ($user instanceof MyUser) {
                $this->logger->info(/** ... */);
            }
    
            // or alternatively
            if ( ! $user instanceof MyUser) {
                throw new \LogicException(
                    '$user must be an instance of MyUser, '
                   .'other instances are not supported.'
                );
            }
    
        }
    }
    
Note: PHP Analyzer uses reverse abstract interpretation to narrow down the types inside the if block in such a case.
  1. Add the method to the interface:

    interface User
    {
        /** @return string */
        public function getPassword();
    
        /** @return string */
        public function getDisplayName();
    }
    
Loading history...
237
                   && ($network = $this->params()->fromQuery('network'))
238
                   && ($data    = $this->params()->fromPost('data'))
239
        ) {
240
            $profileClass = '\\Auth\\Entity\\SocialProfiles\\' . $network;
241
            $profile      = new $profileClass();
242
            $profile->setData(\Zend\Json\Json::decode($data, \Zend\Json\Json::TYPE_ARRAY));
243
        } else {
244
            throw new \RuntimeException(
245
                'Missing arguments. Either provide "spId" as Get or "network" and "data" as Post.'
246
            );
247
        }
248
        
249
        return array(
250
            'profile' => $profile
251
        );
252
    }
253
254
    /**
255
     * Changes the status of an application
256
     *
257
     * @return array
0 ignored issues
show
Documentation introduced by
Should the return type not be \Zend\Stdlib\ResponseInterface|array?

This check compares the return type specified in the @return annotation of a function or method doc comment with the types returned by the function and raises an issue if they mismatch.

Loading history...
258
     */
259
    public function statusAction()
260
    {
261
        $applicationId = $this->params('id');
262
        /* @var \Applications\Repository\Application $repository */
263
        $repository    = $this->serviceLocator->get('repositories')->get('Applications/Application');
264
        /* @var Application $application */
265
        $application   = $repository->find($applicationId);
266
267
        /* @var Request $request */
268
        $request = $this->getRequest();
269
270
        if (!$application) {
271
            throw new \InvalidArgumentException('Could not find application.');
272
        }
273
        
274
        $this->acl($application, 'change');
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to ManageController::acl() has too many arguments starting with $application.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
275
        
276
        $jsonFormat    = 'json' == $this->params()->fromQuery('format');
277
        $status        = $this->params('status', Status::CONFIRMED);
278
        $settings = $this->settings();
0 ignored issues
show
Documentation Bug introduced by
The method settings does not exist on object<Applications\Controller\ManageController>? Since you implemented __call, maybe consider adding a @method annotation.

If you implement __call and you know which methods are available, you can improve IDE auto-completion and static analysis by adding a @method annotation to the class.

This is often the case, when __call is implemented by a parent class and only the child class knows which methods exist:

class ParentClass {
    private $data = array();

    public function __call($method, array $args) {
        if (0 === strpos($method, 'get')) {
            return $this->data[strtolower(substr($method, 3))];
        }

        throw new \LogicException(sprintf('Unsupported method: %s', $method));
    }
}

/**
 * If this class knows which fields exist, you can specify the methods here:
 *
 * @method string getName()
 */
class SomeClass extends ParentClass { }
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Unused Code introduced by
$settings is not used, you could remove the assignment.

This check looks for variable assignements that are either overwritten by other assignments or where the variable is not used subsequently.

$myVar = 'Value';
$higher = false;

if (rand(1, 6) > 3) {
    $higher = true;
} else {
    $higher = false;
}

Both the $myVar assignment in line 1 and the $higher assignment in line 2 are dead. The first because $myVar is never used and the second because $higher is always overwritten for every possible time line.

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279
        
280
        if (in_array($status, array(Status::INCOMING))) {
281
            $application->changeStatus($status);
282
            if ($request->isXmlHttpRequest()) {
283
                $response = $this->getResponse();
284
                $response->setContent('ok');
285
                return $response;
286
            }
287
            if ($jsonFormat) {
288
                return array(
289
                    'status' => 'success',
290
                );
291
            }
292
            return $this->redirect()->toRoute('lang/applications/detail', array(), true);
0 ignored issues
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Documentation introduced by
true is of type boolean, but the function expects a array.

It seems like the type of the argument is not accepted by the function/method which you are calling.

In some cases, in particular if PHP’s automatic type-juggling kicks in this might be fine. In other cases, however this might be a bug.

We suggest to add an explicit type cast like in the following example:

function acceptsInteger($int) { }

$x = '123'; // string "123"

// Instead of
acceptsInteger($x);

// we recommend to use
acceptsInteger((integer) $x);
Loading history...
293
        }
294
295
        $events = $this->serviceLocator->get('Applications/Events');
296
297
        /* @var ApplicationEvent $event */
298
        $event = $events->getEvent(ApplicationEvent::EVENT_APPLICATION_STATUS_CHANGE,
299
                                   $this,
300
                                   [
301
                                       'application' => $application,
302
                                       'status' => $status,
303
                                       'user' => $this->auth()->getUser(),
304
                                   ]
305
        );
306
307
        $event->setIsPostRequest($request->isPost());
308
        $event->setPostData($request->getPost());
309
        $events->trigger($event);
310
311
        $params = $event->getFormData();
312
313
314
        if ($request->isPost()) {
315
316
            if ($jsonFormat) {
317
                return array(
318
                    'status' => 'success',
319
                );
320
            }
321
            $this->notification()->success($event->getNotification());
322
            return $this->redirect()->toRoute('lang/applications/detail', array(), true);
0 ignored issues
show
Documentation introduced by
true is of type boolean, but the function expects a array.

It seems like the type of the argument is not accepted by the function/method which you are calling.

In some cases, in particular if PHP’s automatic type-juggling kicks in this might be fine. In other cases, however this might be a bug.

We suggest to add an explicit type cast like in the following example:

function acceptsInteger($int) { }

$x = '123'; // string "123"

// Instead of
acceptsInteger($x);

// we recommend to use
acceptsInteger((integer) $x);
Loading history...
323
        }
324
325
        if ($jsonFormat) {
326
            return $params;
327
        }
328
329
        /* @var \Applications\Form\Mail $form */
330
        $form = $this->serviceLocator->get('FormElementManager')->get('Applications/Mail');
331
        $form->populateValues($params);
332
333
334
335
        $reciptient = $params['to'];
336
337
        return [
338
            'recipient' => $reciptient,
339
            'form' => $form
340
        ];
341
    }
342
    
343
    /**
344
     * Forwards an application via Email
345
     *
346
     * @throws \InvalidArgumentException
347
     * @return \Zend\View\Model\JsonModel
348
     */
349
    public function forwardAction()
350
    {
351
        $services     = $this->serviceLocator;
352
        $emailAddress = $this->params()->fromQuery('email');
353
        /* @var \Applications\Entity\Application $application */
354
        $application  = $services->get('repositories')->get('Applications/Application')
355
                                 ->find($this->params('id'));
356
        
357
        $this->acl($application, 'forward');
0 ignored issues
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Unused Code introduced by
The call to ManageController::acl() has too many arguments starting with $application.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

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358
        
359
        $translator   = $services->get('translator');
360
         
361
        if (!$emailAddress) {
362
            throw new \InvalidArgumentException('An email address must be supplied.');
363
        }
364
        
365
        $params = array(
366
            'ok' => true,
367
            'text' => sprintf($translator->translate('Forwarded application to %s'), $emailAddress)
368
        );
369
        
370
        try {
371
            $userName    = $this->auth('info')->displayName;
0 ignored issues
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Bug introduced by
The property displayName does not seem to exist in Auth\Controller\Plugin\Auth.

An attempt at access to an undefined property has been detected. This may either be a typographical error or the property has been renamed but there are still references to its old name.

If you really want to allow access to undefined properties, you can define magic methods to allow access. See the php core documentation on Overloading.

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Unused Code introduced by
The call to ManageController::auth() has too many arguments starting with 'info'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
372
            $fromAddress = $application->getJob()->getContactEmail();
373
            $mailOptions = array(
374
                'application' => $application,
375
                'to'          => $emailAddress,
376
                'from'        => array($fromAddress => $userName)
377
            );
378
            $this->mailer('Applications/Forward', $mailOptions, true);
0 ignored issues
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Unused Code introduced by
The call to ManageController::mailer() has too many arguments starting with 'Applications/Forward'.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
379
            $this->notification()->success($params['text']);
380
        } catch (\Exception $ex) {
381
            $params = array(
382
                'ok' => false,
383
                'text' => sprintf($translator->translate('Forward application to %s failed.'), $emailAddress)
384
            );
385
            $this->notification()->error($params['text']);
386
        }
387
        $application->changeStatus($application->getStatus(), $params['text']);
388
        return new JsonModel($params);
389
    }
390
391
    /**
392
     * Deletes an application
393
     *
394
     * @return array|\Zend\Http\Response
395
     */
396
    public function deleteAction()
397
    {
398
        $id          = $this->params('id');
399
        $services    = $this->serviceLocator;
400
        $repositories= $services->get('repositories');
401
        $repository  = $repositories->get('Applications/Application');
402
        $application = $repository->find($id);
403
        
404
        if (!$application) {
405
            throw new \DomainException('Application not found.');
406
        }
407
408
        $this->acl($application, 'delete');
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to ManageController::acl() has too many arguments starting with $application.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
409
410
        $events   = $services->get('Applications/Events');
411
        $events->trigger(ApplicationEvent::EVENT_APPLICATION_PRE_DELETE, $this, [ 'application' => $application ]);
412
        
413
        $repositories->remove($application);
414
        
415
        if ('json' == $this->params()->fromQuery('format')) {
416
            return ['status' => 'success'];
417
        }
418
        
419
        return $this->redirect()->toRoute('lang/applications', array(), true);
0 ignored issues
show
Documentation introduced by
true is of type boolean, but the function expects a array.

It seems like the type of the argument is not accepted by the function/method which you are calling.

In some cases, in particular if PHP’s automatic type-juggling kicks in this might be fine. In other cases, however this might be a bug.

We suggest to add an explicit type cast like in the following example:

function acceptsInteger($int) { }

$x = '123'; // string "123"

// Instead of
acceptsInteger($x);

// we recommend to use
acceptsInteger((integer) $x);
Loading history...
420
    }
421
422
    /**
423
     * Move an application to talent pool
424
     *
425
     * @return \Zend\Http\Response
426
     * @since 0.26
427
     */
428
    public function moveAction()
429
    {
430
        $id = $this->params('id');
431
        $serviceManager = $this->serviceLocator;
432
        $repositories = $serviceManager->get('repositories');
433
        $application = $repositories->get('Applications/Application')->find($id);
434
        
435
        if (!$application) {
436
            throw new \DomainException('Application not found.');
437
        }
438
439
        $this->acl($application, 'move');
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The call to ManageController::acl() has too many arguments starting with $application.

This check compares calls to functions or methods with their respective definitions. If the call has more arguments than are defined, it raises an issue.

If a function is defined several times with a different number of parameters, the check may pick up the wrong definition and report false positives. One codebase where this has been known to happen is Wordpress.

In this case you can add the @ignore PhpDoc annotation to the duplicate definition and it will be ignored.

Loading history...
440
        
441
        $user = $this->auth()->getUser();
442
        $cv = $repositories->get('Cv/Cv')->createFromApplication($application, $user);
443
        
444
        $repositories->store($cv);
445
        $repositories->remove($application);
446
447
        $this->notification()->success(
448
            /*@translate*/ 'Application has been successfully moved to Talent Pool');
449
        
450
        return $this->redirect()->toRoute('lang/applications', array(), true);
0 ignored issues
show
Documentation introduced by
true is of type boolean, but the function expects a array.

It seems like the type of the argument is not accepted by the function/method which you are calling.

In some cases, in particular if PHP’s automatic type-juggling kicks in this might be fine. In other cases, however this might be a bug.

We suggest to add an explicit type cast like in the following example:

function acceptsInteger($int) { }

$x = '123'; // string "123"

// Instead of
acceptsInteger($x);

// we recommend to use
acceptsInteger((integer) $x);
Loading history...
451
    }
452
}
453