Conditions | 5 |
Paths | 5 |
Total Lines | 18 |
Lines | 0 |
Ratio | 0 % |
Changes | 0 |
1 | <?php |
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24 | public function add(Result $result) |
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25 | { |
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26 | switch (get_class($result)) { |
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27 | case Error::class: |
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28 | $this->addError($result); |
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29 | break; |
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30 | case Failure::class: |
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31 | $this->addFailure($result); |
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32 | break; |
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33 | case Created::class: |
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34 | $this->addCreated($result); |
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35 | break; |
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36 | case Updated::class: |
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37 | $this->addUpdated($result); |
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38 | break; |
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39 | default: |
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40 | } |
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41 | } |
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42 | |||
94 |
This check looks for parameters that are defined as one type in their type hint or doc comment but seem to be used as a narrower type, i.e an implementation of an interface or a subclass.
Consider changing the type of the parameter or doing an instanceof check before assuming your parameter is of the expected type.