It is generally recommended to explicitly declare the visibility for methods.
Adding explicit visibility (private, protected, or public) is generally
recommend to communicate to other developers how, and from where this method
is intended to be used.
It is generally recommended to explicitly declare the visibility for methods.
Adding explicit visibility (private, protected, or public) is generally
recommend to communicate to other developers how, and from where this method
is intended to be used.
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.
It is generally recommended to explicitly declare the visibility for methods.
Adding explicit visibility (private, protected, or public) is generally
recommend to communicate to other developers how, and from where this method
is intended to be used.
It is generally recommended to explicitly declare the visibility for methods.
Adding explicit visibility (private, protected, or public) is generally
recommend to communicate to other developers how, and from where this method
is intended to be used.
The method widget() does not exist on Inji\Module. It seems like you code against a sub-type of Inji\Module such as Inji\View or Inji\Db.
(
Ignorable by Annotation
)
If this is a false-positive, you can also ignore this issue in your code via the ignore-call annotation
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.
It is generally recommended to explicitly declare the visibility for methods.
Adding explicit visibility (private, protected, or public) is generally
recommend to communicate to other developers how, and from where this method
is intended to be used.
It is generally recommended to explicitly declare the visibility for methods.
Adding explicit visibility (private, protected, or public) is generally
recommend to communicate to other developers how, and from where this method
is intended to be used.
The method page() does not exist on Inji\Module. It seems like you code against a sub-type of Inji\Module such as Inji\View or Inji\Db.
(
Ignorable by Annotation
)
If this is a false-positive, you can also ignore this issue in your code via the ignore-call annotation
It is generally recommended to explicitly declare the visibility for methods.
Adding explicit visibility (private, protected, or public) is generally
recommend to communicate to other developers how, and from where this method
is intended to be used.
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.
It is generally recommended to explicitly declare the visibility for methods.
Adding explicit visibility (private, protected, or public) is generally
recommend to communicate to other developers how, and from where this method
is intended to be used.
Adding explicit visibility (
private
,protected
, orpublic
) is generally recommend to communicate to other developers how, and from where this method is intended to be used.