| Conditions | 5 | 
| Paths | 4 | 
| Total Lines | 69 | 
| Lines | 0 | 
| Ratio | 0 % | 
| Changes | 0 | ||
Small methods make your code easier to understand, in particular if combined with a good name. Besides, if your method is small, finding a good name is usually much easier.
For example, if you find yourself adding comments to a method's body, this is usually a good sign to extract the commented part to a new method, and use the comment as a starting point when coming up with a good name for this new method.
Commonly applied refactorings include:
If many parameters/temporary variables are present:
| 1 | <?php | ||
| 121 | public static function handleChangedToken(ConfigEvent $event) | ||
| 122 |     { | ||
| 123 | Event::off( | ||
| 124 | Token::class, | ||
| 125 | Token::EVENT_AFTER_INSERT, | ||
| 126 | [ | ||
| 127 | ManageTokenProjectConfig::class, | ||
| 128 | 'save' | ||
| 129 | ] | ||
| 130 | ); | ||
| 131 | |||
| 132 | Event::off( | ||
| 133 | Token::class, | ||
| 134 | Token::EVENT_AFTER_UPDATE, | ||
| 135 | [ | ||
| 136 | ManageTokenProjectConfig::class, | ||
| 137 | 'save' | ||
| 138 | ] | ||
| 139 | ); | ||
| 140 | |||
| 141 | // Get the UID that was matched in the config path | ||
| 142 | $uid = $event->tokenMatches[0]; | ||
| 143 | |||
| 144 | if (null === ($token = Token::findOne([ | ||
| 145 | 'uid' => $uid, | ||
| 146 | 'enabled' => null | ||
| 147 |             ]))) { | ||
| 148 | $token = new Token(); | ||
| 149 | } | ||
| 150 | |||
| 151 | // Compare dates from config | ||
| 152 | $configDateUpdated = $event->newValue['dateUpdated'] ?? null; | ||
| 153 | $tokenDateUpdated = $token->dateUpdated ?? null; | ||
| 154 | |||
| 155 | // If the token has been updated more recently in the database, use it | ||
| 156 |         if ($configDateUpdated && $tokenDateUpdated && strtotime($tokenDateUpdated) > strtotime($configDateUpdated)) { | ||
| 157 | $event->newValue = array_merge( | ||
| 158 | $event->newValue, | ||
| 159 | [ | ||
| 160 | 'accessToken' => $token->accessToken, | ||
| 161 | ] | ||
| 162 | ); | ||
| 163 | } | ||
| 164 | |||
| 165 | // Ignore | ||
| 166 | unset($event->newValue['dateUpdated']); | ||
| 167 | |||
| 168 | Craft::configure($token, $event->newValue); | ||
| 169 | |||
| 170 | $token->save(); | ||
| 171 | |||
| 172 | Event::on( | ||
| 173 | Token::class, | ||
| 174 | Token::EVENT_AFTER_INSERT, | ||
| 175 | [ | ||
| 176 | ManageTokenProjectConfig::class, | ||
| 177 | 'save' | ||
| 178 | ] | ||
| 179 | ); | ||
| 180 | |||
| 181 | Event::on( | ||
| 182 | Token::class, | ||
| 183 | Token::EVENT_AFTER_UPDATE, | ||
| 184 | [ | ||
| 185 | ManageTokenProjectConfig::class, | ||
| 186 | 'save' | ||
| 187 | ] | ||
| 188 | ); | ||
| 189 | } | ||
| 190 | |||
| 246 | 
If a method or function can return multiple different values and unless you are sure that you only can receive a single value in this context, we recommend to add an additional type check:
If this a common case that PHP Analyzer should handle natively, please let us know by opening an issue.