mbirth /
cops
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| 1 | <?php |
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| 2 | /** |
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| 3 | * COPS (Calibre OPDS PHP Server) class file |
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| 4 | * |
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| 5 | * @license GPL 2 (http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html) |
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| 6 | * @author Sébastien Lucas <[email protected]> |
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| 7 | */ |
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| 8 | |||
| 9 | require_once ("config.php"); |
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0 ignored issues
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Coding Style
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
The string literal
config.php does not require double quotes, as per coding-style, please use single quotes.
PHP provides two ways to mark string literals. Either with single quotes String literals in single quotes on the other hand are evaluated very literally and the only two
characters that needs escaping in the literal are the single quote itself ( Double quoted string literals may contain other variables or more complex escape sequences. <?php
$singleQuoted = 'Value';
$doubleQuoted = "\tSingle is $singleQuoted";
print $doubleQuoted;
will print an indented: If your string literal does not contain variables or escape sequences, it should be defined using single quotes to make that fact clear. For more information on PHP string literals and available escape sequences see the PHP core documentation. Loading history...
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| 10 | require_once ("base.php"); |
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0 ignored issues
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Coding Style
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
The string literal
base.php does not require double quotes, as per coding-style, please use single quotes.
PHP provides two ways to mark string literals. Either with single quotes String literals in single quotes on the other hand are evaluated very literally and the only two
characters that needs escaping in the literal are the single quote itself ( Double quoted string literals may contain other variables or more complex escape sequences. <?php
$singleQuoted = 'Value';
$doubleQuoted = "\tSingle is $singleQuoted";
print $doubleQuoted;
will print an indented: If your string literal does not contain variables or escape sequences, it should be defined using single quotes to make that fact clear. For more information on PHP string literals and available escape sequences see the PHP core documentation. Loading history...
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| 11 | |||
| 12 | function getComponentContent ($book, $component, $add) { |
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| 13 | 7 | $data = $book->component ($component); |
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| 14 | |||
| 15 | $callback = function ($m) use ($book, $component, $add) { |
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| 16 | 7 | $method = $m[1]; |
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| 17 | 7 | $path = $m[2]; |
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| 18 | 7 | $end = ""; |
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0 ignored issues
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show
Coding Style
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
The string literal
does not require double quotes, as per coding-style, please use single quotes.
PHP provides two ways to mark string literals. Either with single quotes String literals in single quotes on the other hand are evaluated very literally and the only two
characters that needs escaping in the literal are the single quote itself ( Double quoted string literals may contain other variables or more complex escape sequences. <?php
$singleQuoted = 'Value';
$doubleQuoted = "\tSingle is $singleQuoted";
print $doubleQuoted;
will print an indented: If your string literal does not contain variables or escape sequences, it should be defined using single quotes to make that fact clear. For more information on PHP string literals and available escape sequences see the PHP core documentation. Loading history...
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| 19 | 7 | if (preg_match ("/^src\s*:/", $method)) { |
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0 ignored issues
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Coding Style
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
The string literal
/^src\s*:/ does not require double quotes, as per coding-style, please use single quotes.
PHP provides two ways to mark string literals. Either with single quotes String literals in single quotes on the other hand are evaluated very literally and the only two
characters that needs escaping in the literal are the single quote itself ( Double quoted string literals may contain other variables or more complex escape sequences. <?php
$singleQuoted = 'Value';
$doubleQuoted = "\tSingle is $singleQuoted";
print $doubleQuoted;
will print an indented: If your string literal does not contain variables or escape sequences, it should be defined using single quotes to make that fact clear. For more information on PHP string literals and available escape sequences see the PHP core documentation. Loading history...
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| 20 | 1 | $end = ")"; |
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0 ignored issues
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Coding Style
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
The string literal
) does not require double quotes, as per coding-style, please use single quotes.
PHP provides two ways to mark string literals. Either with single quotes String literals in single quotes on the other hand are evaluated very literally and the only two
characters that needs escaping in the literal are the single quote itself ( Double quoted string literals may contain other variables or more complex escape sequences. <?php
$singleQuoted = 'Value';
$doubleQuoted = "\tSingle is $singleQuoted";
print $doubleQuoted;
will print an indented: If your string literal does not contain variables or escape sequences, it should be defined using single quotes to make that fact clear. For more information on PHP string literals and available escape sequences see the PHP core documentation. Loading history...
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| 21 | 1 | } |
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| 22 | 7 | if (preg_match ("/^#/", $path)) { |
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0 ignored issues
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show
Coding Style
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
The string literal
/^#/ does not require double quotes, as per coding-style, please use single quotes.
PHP provides two ways to mark string literals. Either with single quotes String literals in single quotes on the other hand are evaluated very literally and the only two
characters that needs escaping in the literal are the single quote itself ( Double quoted string literals may contain other variables or more complex escape sequences. <?php
$singleQuoted = 'Value';
$doubleQuoted = "\tSingle is $singleQuoted";
print $doubleQuoted;
will print an indented: If your string literal does not contain variables or escape sequences, it should be defined using single quotes to make that fact clear. For more information on PHP string literals and available escape sequences see the PHP core documentation. Loading history...
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| 23 | 3 | return "{$method}'{$path}'{$end}"; |
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0 ignored issues
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show
As per coding-style, please use concatenation or
sprintf for the variable $method instead of interpolation.
It is generally a best practice as it is often more readable to use concatenation instead of interpolation for variables inside strings. // Instead of
$x = "foo $bar $baz";
// Better use either
$x = "foo " . $bar . " " . $baz;
$x = sprintf("foo %s %s", $bar, $baz);
Loading history...
As per coding-style, please use concatenation or
sprintf for the variable $path instead of interpolation.
It is generally a best practice as it is often more readable to use concatenation instead of interpolation for variables inside strings. // Instead of
$x = "foo $bar $baz";
// Better use either
$x = "foo " . $bar . " " . $baz;
$x = sprintf("foo %s %s", $bar, $baz);
Loading history...
As per coding-style, please use concatenation or
sprintf for the variable $end instead of interpolation.
It is generally a best practice as it is often more readable to use concatenation instead of interpolation for variables inside strings. // Instead of
$x = "foo $bar $baz";
// Better use either
$x = "foo " . $bar . " " . $baz;
$x = sprintf("foo %s %s", $bar, $baz);
Loading history...
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| 24 | } |
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| 25 | 7 | $hash = ""; |
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0 ignored issues
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show
Coding Style
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
The string literal
does not require double quotes, as per coding-style, please use single quotes.
PHP provides two ways to mark string literals. Either with single quotes String literals in single quotes on the other hand are evaluated very literally and the only two
characters that needs escaping in the literal are the single quote itself ( Double quoted string literals may contain other variables or more complex escape sequences. <?php
$singleQuoted = 'Value';
$doubleQuoted = "\tSingle is $singleQuoted";
print $doubleQuoted;
will print an indented: If your string literal does not contain variables or escape sequences, it should be defined using single quotes to make that fact clear. For more information on PHP string literals and available escape sequences see the PHP core documentation. Loading history...
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| 26 | 7 | View Code Duplication | if (preg_match ("/^(.+)#(.+)$/", $path, $matches)) { |
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0 ignored issues
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This code seems to be duplicated across your project.
Duplicated code is one of the most pungent code smells. If you need to duplicate the same code in three or more different places, we strongly encourage you to look into extracting the code into a single class or operation. You can also find more detailed suggestions in the “Code” section of your repository. Loading history...
Coding Style
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
The string literal
/^(.+)#(.+)$/ does not require double quotes, as per coding-style, please use single quotes.
PHP provides two ways to mark string literals. Either with single quotes String literals in single quotes on the other hand are evaluated very literally and the only two
characters that needs escaping in the literal are the single quote itself ( Double quoted string literals may contain other variables or more complex escape sequences. <?php
$singleQuoted = 'Value';
$doubleQuoted = "\tSingle is $singleQuoted";
print $doubleQuoted;
will print an indented: If your string literal does not contain variables or escape sequences, it should be defined using single quotes to make that fact clear. For more information on PHP string literals and available escape sequences see the PHP core documentation. Loading history...
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| 27 | 3 | $path = $matches [1]; |
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| 28 | 3 | $hash = "#" . $matches [2]; |
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0 ignored issues
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show
Coding Style
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
The string literal
# does not require double quotes, as per coding-style, please use single quotes.
PHP provides two ways to mark string literals. Either with single quotes String literals in single quotes on the other hand are evaluated very literally and the only two
characters that needs escaping in the literal are the single quote itself ( Double quoted string literals may contain other variables or more complex escape sequences. <?php
$singleQuoted = 'Value';
$doubleQuoted = "\tSingle is $singleQuoted";
print $doubleQuoted;
will print an indented: If your string literal does not contain variables or escape sequences, it should be defined using single quotes to make that fact clear. For more information on PHP string literals and available escape sequences see the PHP core documentation. Loading history...
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| 29 | 3 | } |
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| 30 | 7 | $comp = $book->getComponentName ($component, $path); |
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| 31 | 7 | if (!$comp) return "{$method}'#'{$end}"; |
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0 ignored issues
–
show
As per coding-style, please use concatenation or
sprintf for the variable $method instead of interpolation.
It is generally a best practice as it is often more readable to use concatenation instead of interpolation for variables inside strings. // Instead of
$x = "foo $bar $baz";
// Better use either
$x = "foo " . $bar . " " . $baz;
$x = sprintf("foo %s %s", $bar, $baz);
Loading history...
As per coding-style, please use concatenation or
sprintf for the variable $end instead of interpolation.
It is generally a best practice as it is often more readable to use concatenation instead of interpolation for variables inside strings. // Instead of
$x = "foo $bar $baz";
// Better use either
$x = "foo " . $bar . " " . $baz;
$x = sprintf("foo %s %s", $bar, $baz);
Loading history...
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| 32 | 7 | $out = "{$method}'epubfs.php?{$add}comp={$comp}{$hash}'{$end}"; |
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0 ignored issues
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show
As per coding-style, please use concatenation or
sprintf for the variable $method instead of interpolation.
It is generally a best practice as it is often more readable to use concatenation instead of interpolation for variables inside strings. // Instead of
$x = "foo $bar $baz";
// Better use either
$x = "foo " . $bar . " " . $baz;
$x = sprintf("foo %s %s", $bar, $baz);
Loading history...
As per coding-style, please use concatenation or
sprintf for the variable $add instead of interpolation.
It is generally a best practice as it is often more readable to use concatenation instead of interpolation for variables inside strings. // Instead of
$x = "foo $bar $baz";
// Better use either
$x = "foo " . $bar . " " . $baz;
$x = sprintf("foo %s %s", $bar, $baz);
Loading history...
As per coding-style, please use concatenation or
sprintf for the variable $comp instead of interpolation.
It is generally a best practice as it is often more readable to use concatenation instead of interpolation for variables inside strings. // Instead of
$x = "foo $bar $baz";
// Better use either
$x = "foo " . $bar . " " . $baz;
$x = sprintf("foo %s %s", $bar, $baz);
Loading history...
As per coding-style, please use concatenation or
sprintf for the variable $hash instead of interpolation.
It is generally a best practice as it is often more readable to use concatenation instead of interpolation for variables inside strings. // Instead of
$x = "foo $bar $baz";
// Better use either
$x = "foo " . $bar . " " . $baz;
$x = sprintf("foo %s %s", $bar, $baz);
Loading history...
As per coding-style, please use concatenation or
sprintf for the variable $end instead of interpolation.
It is generally a best practice as it is often more readable to use concatenation instead of interpolation for variables inside strings. // Instead of
$x = "foo $bar $baz";
// Better use either
$x = "foo " . $bar . " " . $baz;
$x = sprintf("foo %s %s", $bar, $baz);
Loading history...
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| 33 | 7 | if ($end) { |
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| 34 | 1 | return $out; |
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| 35 | } |
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| 36 | 7 | return str_replace ("&", "&", $out); |
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0 ignored issues
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show
Coding Style
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
The string literal
& does not require double quotes, as per coding-style, please use single quotes.
PHP provides two ways to mark string literals. Either with single quotes String literals in single quotes on the other hand are evaluated very literally and the only two
characters that needs escaping in the literal are the single quote itself ( Double quoted string literals may contain other variables or more complex escape sequences. <?php
$singleQuoted = 'Value';
$doubleQuoted = "\tSingle is $singleQuoted";
print $doubleQuoted;
will print an indented: If your string literal does not contain variables or escape sequences, it should be defined using single quotes to make that fact clear. For more information on PHP string literals and available escape sequences see the PHP core documentation. Loading history...
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| 37 | 7 | }; |
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| 38 | |||
| 39 | 7 | $data = preg_replace_callback ("/(src=)[\"']([^:]*?)[\"']/", $callback, $data); |
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| 40 | 7 | $data = preg_replace_callback ("/(href=)[\"']([^:]*?)[\"']/", $callback, $data); |
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| 41 | 7 | $data = preg_replace_callback ("/(\@import\s+)[\"'](.*?)[\"'];/", $callback, $data); |
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| 42 | 7 | $data = preg_replace_callback ("/(src\s*:\s*url\()(.*?)\)/", $callback, $data); |
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0 ignored issues
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show
Coding Style
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
The string literal
/(src\s*:\s*url\()(.*?)\)/ does not require double quotes, as per coding-style, please use single quotes.
PHP provides two ways to mark string literals. Either with single quotes String literals in single quotes on the other hand are evaluated very literally and the only two
characters that needs escaping in the literal are the single quote itself ( Double quoted string literals may contain other variables or more complex escape sequences. <?php
$singleQuoted = 'Value';
$doubleQuoted = "\tSingle is $singleQuoted";
print $doubleQuoted;
will print an indented: If your string literal does not contain variables or escape sequences, it should be defined using single quotes to make that fact clear. For more information on PHP string literals and available escape sequences see the PHP core documentation. Loading history...
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| 43 | |||
| 44 | 7 | return $data; |
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| 45 | } |
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| 46 | |||
| 47 | if (php_sapi_name() === 'cli') { return; } |
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| 48 | |||
| 49 | $idData = getURLParam ("data", NULL); |
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0 ignored issues
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show
Coding Style
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
The string literal
data does not require double quotes, as per coding-style, please use single quotes.
PHP provides two ways to mark string literals. Either with single quotes String literals in single quotes on the other hand are evaluated very literally and the only two
characters that needs escaping in the literal are the single quote itself ( Double quoted string literals may contain other variables or more complex escape sequences. <?php
$singleQuoted = 'Value';
$doubleQuoted = "\tSingle is $singleQuoted";
print $doubleQuoted;
will print an indented: If your string literal does not contain variables or escape sequences, it should be defined using single quotes to make that fact clear. For more information on PHP string literals and available escape sequences see the PHP core documentation. Loading history...
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| 50 | $add = "data=$idData&"; |
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0 ignored issues
–
show
As per coding-style, please use concatenation or
sprintf for the variable $idData instead of interpolation.
It is generally a best practice as it is often more readable to use concatenation instead of interpolation for variables inside strings. // Instead of
$x = "foo $bar $baz";
// Better use either
$x = "foo " . $bar . " " . $baz;
$x = sprintf("foo %s %s", $bar, $baz);
Loading history...
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| 51 | View Code Duplication | if (!is_null (GetUrlParam (DB))) $add .= DB . "=" . GetUrlParam (DB) . "&"; |
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0 ignored issues
–
show
This code seems to be duplicated across your project.
Duplicated code is one of the most pungent code smells. If you need to duplicate the same code in three or more different places, we strongly encourage you to look into extracting the code into a single class or operation. You can also find more detailed suggestions in the “Code” section of your repository. Loading history...
Coding Style
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
The string literal
= does not require double quotes, as per coding-style, please use single quotes.
PHP provides two ways to mark string literals. Either with single quotes String literals in single quotes on the other hand are evaluated very literally and the only two
characters that needs escaping in the literal are the single quote itself ( Double quoted string literals may contain other variables or more complex escape sequences. <?php
$singleQuoted = 'Value';
$doubleQuoted = "\tSingle is $singleQuoted";
print $doubleQuoted;
will print an indented: If your string literal does not contain variables or escape sequences, it should be defined using single quotes to make that fact clear. For more information on PHP string literals and available escape sequences see the PHP core documentation. Loading history...
Coding Style
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
The string literal
& does not require double quotes, as per coding-style, please use single quotes.
PHP provides two ways to mark string literals. Either with single quotes String literals in single quotes on the other hand are evaluated very literally and the only two
characters that needs escaping in the literal are the single quote itself ( Double quoted string literals may contain other variables or more complex escape sequences. <?php
$singleQuoted = 'Value';
$doubleQuoted = "\tSingle is $singleQuoted";
print $doubleQuoted;
will print an indented: If your string literal does not contain variables or escape sequences, it should be defined using single quotes to make that fact clear. For more information on PHP string literals and available escape sequences see the PHP core documentation. Loading history...
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| 52 | $myBook = Book::getBookByDataId($idData); |
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| 53 | |||
| 54 | $book = new EPub ($myBook->getFilePath ("EPUB", $idData)); |
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0 ignored issues
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show
Coding Style
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
The string literal
EPUB does not require double quotes, as per coding-style, please use single quotes.
PHP provides two ways to mark string literals. Either with single quotes String literals in single quotes on the other hand are evaluated very literally and the only two
characters that needs escaping in the literal are the single quote itself ( Double quoted string literals may contain other variables or more complex escape sequences. <?php
$singleQuoted = 'Value';
$doubleQuoted = "\tSingle is $singleQuoted";
print $doubleQuoted;
will print an indented: If your string literal does not contain variables or escape sequences, it should be defined using single quotes to make that fact clear. For more information on PHP string literals and available escape sequences see the PHP core documentation. Loading history...
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| 55 | |||
| 56 | $book->initSpineComponent (); |
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| 57 | |||
| 58 | if (!isset ($_GET["comp"])) { |
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0 ignored issues
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show
Coding Style
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
The string literal
comp does not require double quotes, as per coding-style, please use single quotes.
PHP provides two ways to mark string literals. Either with single quotes String literals in single quotes on the other hand are evaluated very literally and the only two
characters that needs escaping in the literal are the single quote itself ( Double quoted string literals may contain other variables or more complex escape sequences. <?php
$singleQuoted = 'Value';
$doubleQuoted = "\tSingle is $singleQuoted";
print $doubleQuoted;
will print an indented: If your string literal does not contain variables or escape sequences, it should be defined using single quotes to make that fact clear. For more information on PHP string literals and available escape sequences see the PHP core documentation. Loading history...
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| 59 | notFound (); |
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| 60 | return; |
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| 61 | } |
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| 62 | |||
| 63 | $component = $_GET["comp"]; |
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0 ignored issues
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show
Coding Style
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
The string literal
comp does not require double quotes, as per coding-style, please use single quotes.
PHP provides two ways to mark string literals. Either with single quotes String literals in single quotes on the other hand are evaluated very literally and the only two
characters that needs escaping in the literal are the single quote itself ( Double quoted string literals may contain other variables or more complex escape sequences. <?php
$singleQuoted = 'Value';
$doubleQuoted = "\tSingle is $singleQuoted";
print $doubleQuoted;
will print an indented: If your string literal does not contain variables or escape sequences, it should be defined using single quotes to make that fact clear. For more information on PHP string literals and available escape sequences see the PHP core documentation. Loading history...
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| 64 | |||
| 65 | try { |
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| 66 | $data = getComponentContent ($book, $component, $add); |
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| 67 | |||
| 68 | $expires = 60*60*24*14; |
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| 69 | header("Pragma: public"); |
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0 ignored issues
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show
Coding Style
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
The string literal
Pragma: public does not require double quotes, as per coding-style, please use single quotes.
PHP provides two ways to mark string literals. Either with single quotes String literals in single quotes on the other hand are evaluated very literally and the only two
characters that needs escaping in the literal are the single quote itself ( Double quoted string literals may contain other variables or more complex escape sequences. <?php
$singleQuoted = 'Value';
$doubleQuoted = "\tSingle is $singleQuoted";
print $doubleQuoted;
will print an indented: If your string literal does not contain variables or escape sequences, it should be defined using single quotes to make that fact clear. For more information on PHP string literals and available escape sequences see the PHP core documentation. Loading history...
|
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| 70 | header("Cache-Control: maxage=".$expires); |
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0 ignored issues
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show
Coding Style
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
The string literal
Cache-Control: maxage= does not require double quotes, as per coding-style, please use single quotes.
PHP provides two ways to mark string literals. Either with single quotes String literals in single quotes on the other hand are evaluated very literally and the only two
characters that needs escaping in the literal are the single quote itself ( Double quoted string literals may contain other variables or more complex escape sequences. <?php
$singleQuoted = 'Value';
$doubleQuoted = "\tSingle is $singleQuoted";
print $doubleQuoted;
will print an indented: If your string literal does not contain variables or escape sequences, it should be defined using single quotes to make that fact clear. For more information on PHP string literals and available escape sequences see the PHP core documentation. Loading history...
|
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| 71 | header('Expires: ' . gmdate('D, d M Y H:i:s', time()+$expires) . ' GMT'); |
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| 72 | header ("Content-Type: " . $book->componentContentType($component)); |
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0 ignored issues
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show
Coding Style
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
The string literal
Content-Type: does not require double quotes, as per coding-style, please use single quotes.
PHP provides two ways to mark string literals. Either with single quotes String literals in single quotes on the other hand are evaluated very literally and the only two
characters that needs escaping in the literal are the single quote itself ( Double quoted string literals may contain other variables or more complex escape sequences. <?php
$singleQuoted = 'Value';
$doubleQuoted = "\tSingle is $singleQuoted";
print $doubleQuoted;
will print an indented: If your string literal does not contain variables or escape sequences, it should be defined using single quotes to make that fact clear. For more information on PHP string literals and available escape sequences see the PHP core documentation. Loading history...
|
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| 73 | echo $data; |
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| 74 | } |
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| 75 | catch (Exception $e) { |
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| 76 | error_log ($e); |
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| 77 | notFound (); |
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| 78 | } |
The PSR-1: Basic Coding Standard recommends that a file should either introduce new symbols, that is classes, functions, constants or similar, or have side effects. Side effects are anything that executes logic, like for example printing output, changing ini settings or writing to a file.
The idea behind this recommendation is that merely auto-loading a class should not change the state of an application. It also promotes a cleaner style of programming and makes your code less prone to errors, because the logic is not spread out all over the place.
To learn more about the PSR-1, please see the PHP-FIG site on the PSR-1.