Conditions | 4 |
Paths | 8 |
Total Lines | 15 |
Code Lines | 8 |
Lines | 0 |
Ratio | 0 % |
Changes | 1 | ||
Bugs | 0 | Features | 0 |
1 | <?php |
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25 | public function fetch_data() { |
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26 | |||
27 | if ( false === get_transient( self::EXTENSIONS_DATA ) ) { |
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28 | $response = wp_remote_get( 'https://bwp.hmn.md/wp-json/wp/v2/edd-downloads' ); |
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29 | } |
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30 | |||
31 | if ( is_array( $response ) ) { |
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32 | $header = $response['headers']; |
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33 | $body = $response['body']; |
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34 | } |
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35 | |||
36 | if ( ! empty( $body ) ) { |
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37 | return json_decode( $body ); |
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38 | } |
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39 | } |
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40 | } |
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41 |
If you define a variable conditionally, it can happen that it is not defined for all execution paths.
Let’s take a look at an example:
In the above example, the variable $x is defined if you pass “foo” or “bar” as argument for $a. However, since the switch statement has no default case statement, if you pass any other value, the variable $x would be undefined.
Available Fixes
Check for existence of the variable explicitly:
Define a default value for the variable:
Add a value for the missing path: