PSR1 recommends that each class should be in its own file to aid autoloaders.
Having each class in a dedicated file usually plays nice with PSR autoloaders
and is therefore a well established practice. If you use other autoloaders, you
might not want to follow this rule.
PSR1 recommends that each class should be in its own file to aid autoloaders.
Having each class in a dedicated file usually plays nice with PSR autoloaders
and is therefore a well established practice. If you use other autoloaders, you
might not want to follow this rule.
PSR1 recommends that each class should be in its own file to aid autoloaders.
Having each class in a dedicated file usually plays nice with PSR autoloaders
and is therefore a well established practice. If you use other autoloaders, you
might not want to follow this rule.
PSR1 recommends that each class should be in its own file to aid autoloaders.
Having each class in a dedicated file usually plays nice with PSR autoloaders
and is therefore a well established practice. If you use other autoloaders, you
might not want to follow this rule.
40% 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.
PSR1 recommends that each class should be in its own file to aid autoloaders.
Having each class in a dedicated file usually plays nice with PSR autoloaders
and is therefore a well established practice. If you use other autoloaders, you
might not want to follow this rule.
PSR1 recommends that each class should be in its own file to aid autoloaders.
Having each class in a dedicated file usually plays nice with PSR autoloaders
and is therefore a well established practice. If you use other autoloaders, you
might not want to follow this rule.
45% 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.
PSR1 recommends that each class should be in its own file to aid autoloaders.
Having each class in a dedicated file usually plays nice with PSR autoloaders
and is therefore a well established practice. If you use other autoloaders, you
might not want to follow this rule.
PSR1 recommends that each class should be in its own file to aid autoloaders.
Having each class in a dedicated file usually plays nice with PSR autoloaders
and is therefore a well established practice. If you use other autoloaders, you
might not want to follow this rule.
PSR1 recommends that each class should be in its own file to aid autoloaders.
Having each class in a dedicated file usually plays nice with PSR autoloaders
and is therefore a well established practice. If you use other autoloaders, you
might not want to follow this rule.
PSR1 recommends that each class should be in its own file to aid autoloaders.
Having each class in a dedicated file usually plays nice with PSR autoloaders
and is therefore a well established practice. If you use other autoloaders, you
might not want to follow this rule.
PSR1 recommends that each class should be in its own file to aid autoloaders.
Having each class in a dedicated file usually plays nice with PSR autoloaders
and is therefore a well established practice. If you use other autoloaders, you
might not want to follow this rule.
PSR1 recommends that each class should be in its own file to aid autoloaders.
Having each class in a dedicated file usually plays nice with PSR autoloaders
and is therefore a well established practice. If you use other autoloaders, you
might not want to follow this rule.
PSR1 recommends that each class should be in its own file to aid autoloaders.
Having each class in a dedicated file usually plays nice with PSR autoloaders
and is therefore a well established practice. If you use other autoloaders, you
might not want to follow this rule.
Having each class in a dedicated file usually plays nice with PSR autoloaders and is therefore a well established practice. If you use other autoloaders, you might not want to follow this rule.