mbirth /
cops
This project does not seem to handle request data directly as such no vulnerable execution paths were found.
include, or for example
via PHP's auto-loading mechanism.
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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 | class PageQueryResult extends Page |
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0 ignored issues
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| 10 | { |
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| 11 | const SCOPE_TAG = "tag"; |
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0 ignored issues
–
show
Coding Style
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
The string literal
tag 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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| 12 | const SCOPE_RATING = "rating"; |
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| 13 | const SCOPE_SERIES = "series"; |
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0 ignored issues
–
show
Coding Style
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
The string literal
series 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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| 14 | const SCOPE_AUTHOR = "author"; |
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0 ignored issues
–
show
Coding Style
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
The string literal
author 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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| 15 | const SCOPE_BOOK = "book"; |
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0 ignored issues
–
show
Coding Style
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
The string literal
book 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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| 16 | const SCOPE_PUBLISHER = "publisher"; |
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| 17 | |||
| 18 | 24 | private function useTypeahead () { |
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| 19 | 24 | return !is_null (getURLParam ("search")); |
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0 ignored issues
–
show
Coding Style
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
The string literal
search 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 $doubleQuoted;
will print an indented: If your string literal does not contain variables or escape sequences, it should be defined using single quotes to make that fact clear. For more information on PHP string literals and available escape sequences see the PHP core documentation. Loading history...
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| 20 | } |
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| 21 | |||
| 22 | 29 | private function searchByScope ($scope, $limit = FALSE) { |
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| 23 | 29 | $n = $this->n; |
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| 24 | 29 | $numberPerPage = NULL; |
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| 25 | 29 | $queryNormedAndUp = trim($this->query); |
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| 26 | 29 | if (useNormAndUp ()) { |
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| 27 | 7 | $queryNormedAndUp = normAndUp ($this->query); |
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| 28 | 7 | } |
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| 29 | 29 | if ($limit) { |
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| 30 | 22 | $n = 1; |
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| 31 | 22 | $numberPerPage = 5; |
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| 32 | 22 | } |
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| 33 | switch ($scope) { |
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| 34 | 29 | case self::SCOPE_BOOK : |
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0 ignored issues
–
show
There must be no space before the colon in a CASE statement
As per the PSR-2 coding standard, there must not be a space in front of the colon in case statements. switch ($selector) {
case "A": //right
doSomething();
break;
case "B" : //wrong
doSomethingElse();
break;
}
To learn more about the PSR-2 coding standard, please refer to the PHP-Fig. Loading history...
|
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| 35 | 23 | $array = Book::getBooksByStartingLetter ('%' . $queryNormedAndUp, $n, NULL, $numberPerPage); |
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| 36 | 23 | break; |
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| 37 | 28 | case self::SCOPE_AUTHOR : |
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0 ignored issues
–
show
There must be no space before the colon in a CASE statement
As per the PSR-2 coding standard, there must not be a space in front of the colon in case statements. switch ($selector) {
case "A": //right
doSomething();
break;
case "B" : //wrong
doSomethingElse();
break;
}
To learn more about the PSR-2 coding standard, please refer to the PHP-Fig. Loading history...
|
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| 38 | 23 | $array = Author::getAuthorsForSearch ('%' . $queryNormedAndUp); |
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| 39 | 23 | break; |
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| 40 | 25 | case self::SCOPE_SERIES : |
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0 ignored issues
–
show
There must be no space before the colon in a CASE statement
As per the PSR-2 coding standard, there must not be a space in front of the colon in case statements. switch ($selector) {
case "A": //right
doSomething();
break;
case "B" : //wrong
doSomethingElse();
break;
}
To learn more about the PSR-2 coding standard, please refer to the PHP-Fig. Loading history...
|
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| 41 | 22 | $array = Serie::getAllSeriesByQuery ($queryNormedAndUp); |
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| 42 | 22 | break; |
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| 43 | 24 | case self::SCOPE_TAG : |
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0 ignored issues
–
show
There must be no space before the colon in a CASE statement
As per the PSR-2 coding standard, there must not be a space in front of the colon in case statements. switch ($selector) {
case "A": //right
doSomething();
break;
case "B" : //wrong
doSomethingElse();
break;
}
To learn more about the PSR-2 coding standard, please refer to the PHP-Fig. Loading history...
|
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| 44 | 23 | $array = Tag::getAllTagsByQuery ($queryNormedAndUp, $n, NULL, $numberPerPage); |
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| 45 | 23 | break; |
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| 46 | 23 | case self::SCOPE_PUBLISHER : |
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0 ignored issues
–
show
There must be no space before the colon in a CASE statement
As per the PSR-2 coding standard, there must not be a space in front of the colon in case statements. switch ($selector) {
case "A": //right
doSomething();
break;
case "B" : //wrong
doSomethingElse();
break;
}
To learn more about the PSR-2 coding standard, please refer to the PHP-Fig. Loading history...
|
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| 47 | 23 | $array = Publisher::getAllPublishersByQuery ($queryNormedAndUp); |
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| 48 | 23 | break; |
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| 49 | default: |
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| 50 | $array = Book::getBooksByQuery ( |
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| 51 | array ("all" => "%" . $queryNormedAndUp . "%"), $n); |
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0 ignored issues
–
show
Coding Style
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
The string literal
all 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 | } |
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| 53 | |||
| 54 | 29 | return $array; |
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| 55 | } |
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| 56 | |||
| 57 | 22 | public function doSearchByCategory () { |
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| 58 | 22 | $database = GetUrlParam (DB); |
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| 59 | 22 | $out = array (); |
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| 60 | 22 | $pagequery = Base::PAGE_OPENSEARCH_QUERY; |
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| 61 | 22 | $dbArray = array (""); |
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0 ignored issues
–
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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| 62 | 22 | $d = $database; |
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| 63 | 22 | $query = $this->query; |
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| 64 | // Special case when no databases were chosen, we search on all databases |
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| 65 | 22 | if (Base::noDatabaseSelected ()) { |
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| 66 | 1 | $dbArray = Base::getDbNameList (); |
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| 67 | 1 | $d = 0; |
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| 68 | 1 | } |
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| 69 | 22 | foreach ($dbArray as $key) { |
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| 70 | 22 | if (Base::noDatabaseSelected ()) { |
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| 71 | 1 | array_push ($this->entryArray, new Entry ($key, DB . ":query:{$d}", |
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0 ignored issues
–
show
As per coding-style, please use concatenation or
sprintf for the variable $d 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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| 72 | 1 | " ", "text", |
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0 ignored issues
–
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...
Coding Style
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
The string literal
text 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 $doubleQuoted;
will print an indented: If your string literal does not contain variables or escape sequences, it should be defined using single quotes to make that fact clear. For more information on PHP string literals and available escape sequences see the PHP core documentation. Loading history...
|
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| 73 | 1 | array ( new LinkNavigation ("?" . DB . "={$d}")), "tt-header")); |
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0 ignored issues
–
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...
As per coding-style, please use concatenation or
sprintf for the variable $d 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...
Coding Style
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
The string literal
tt-header 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 $doubleQuoted;
will print an indented: If your string literal does not contain variables or escape sequences, it should be defined using single quotes to make that fact clear. For more information on PHP string literals and available escape sequences see the PHP core documentation. Loading history...
|
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| 74 | 1 | Base::getDb ($d); |
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| 75 | 1 | } |
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| 76 | 22 | foreach (array (PageQueryResult::SCOPE_BOOK, |
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| 77 | 22 | PageQueryResult::SCOPE_AUTHOR, |
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| 78 | 22 | PageQueryResult::SCOPE_SERIES, |
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| 79 | 22 | PageQueryResult::SCOPE_TAG, |
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| 80 | 22 | PageQueryResult::SCOPE_PUBLISHER) as $key) { |
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| 81 | 22 | if (in_array($key, getCurrentOption ('ignored_categories'))) { |
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| 82 | 3 | continue; |
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| 83 | } |
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| 84 | 22 | $array = $this->searchByScope ($key, TRUE); |
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| 85 | |||
| 86 | 22 | $i = 0; |
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| 87 | 22 | if (count ($array) == 2 && is_array ($array [0])) { |
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| 88 | 22 | $total = $array [1]; |
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| 89 | 22 | $array = $array [0]; |
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| 90 | 22 | } else { |
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| 91 | 22 | $total = count($array); |
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| 92 | } |
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| 93 | 22 | if ($total > 0) { |
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| 94 | // Comment to help the perl i18n script |
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| 95 | // str_format (localize("bookword", count($array)) |
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0 ignored issues
–
show
Unused Code
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
58% 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. Loading history...
|
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| 96 | // str_format (localize("authorword", count($array)) |
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|
0 ignored issues
–
show
Unused Code
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
58% of this comment could be valid code. Did you maybe forget this after debugging?
Sometimes obsolete code just ends up commented out instead of removed. In this case it is better to remove the code once you have checked you do not need it. The code might also have been commented out for debugging purposes. In this case it is vital that someone uncomments it again or your project may behave in very unexpected ways in production. This check looks for comments that seem to be mostly valid code and reports them. Loading history...
|
|||
| 97 | // str_format (localize("seriesword", count($array)) |
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|
0 ignored issues
–
show
Unused Code
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
58% 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. Loading history...
|
|||
| 98 | // str_format (localize("tagword", count($array)) |
||
|
0 ignored issues
–
show
Unused Code
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
58% of this comment could be valid code. Did you maybe forget this after debugging?
Sometimes obsolete code just ends up commented out instead of removed. In this case it is better to remove the code once you have checked you do not need it. The code might also have been commented out for debugging purposes. In this case it is vital that someone uncomments it again or your project may behave in very unexpected ways in production. This check looks for comments that seem to be mostly valid code and reports them. Loading history...
|
|||
| 99 | // str_format (localize("publisherword", count($array)) |
||
|
0 ignored issues
–
show
Unused Code
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
58% 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. Loading history...
|
|||
| 100 | 21 | array_push ($this->entryArray, new Entry (str_format (localize ("search.result.{$key}"), $this->query), DB . ":query:{$d}:{$key}", |
|
|
0 ignored issues
–
show
As per coding-style, please use concatenation or
sprintf for the variable $key 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 $d 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, $baz);
Loading history...
|
|||
| 101 | 21 | str_format (localize("{$key}word", $total), $total), "text", |
|
|
0 ignored issues
–
show
As per coding-style, please use concatenation or
sprintf for the variable $key 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...
Coding Style
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
The string literal
text 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 $doubleQuoted;
will print an indented: If your string literal does not contain variables or escape sequences, it should be defined using single quotes to make that fact clear. For more information on PHP string literals and available escape sequences see the PHP core documentation. Loading history...
|
|||
| 102 | 21 | array ( new LinkNavigation ("?page={$pagequery}&query={$query}&db={$d}&scope={$key}")), |
|
|
0 ignored issues
–
show
As per coding-style, please use concatenation or
sprintf for the variable $pagequery 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 $query 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 $d 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 $key 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...
|
|||
| 103 | 21 | Base::noDatabaseSelected () ? "" : "tt-header", $total)); |
|
|
0 ignored issues
–
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...
Coding Style
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
The string literal
tt-header 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...
|
|||
| 104 | 21 | } |
|
| 105 | 22 | if (!Base::noDatabaseSelected () && $this->useTypeahead ()) { |
|
| 106 | 6 | foreach ($array as $entry) { |
|
| 107 | 6 | array_push ($this->entryArray, $entry); |
|
| 108 | 6 | $i++; |
|
| 109 | 6 | if ($i > 4) { break; }; |
|
|
0 ignored issues
–
show
|
|||
| 110 | 6 | } |
|
| 111 | 6 | } |
|
| 112 | 22 | } |
|
| 113 | 22 | $d++; |
|
| 114 | 22 | if (Base::noDatabaseSelected ()) { |
|
| 115 | 1 | Base::clearDb (); |
|
| 116 | 1 | } |
|
| 117 | 22 | } |
|
| 118 | 22 | return $out; |
|
| 119 | } |
||
| 120 | |||
| 121 | 31 | public function InitializeContent () |
|
| 122 | { |
||
| 123 | 31 | $scope = getURLParam ("scope"); |
|
|
0 ignored issues
–
show
Coding Style
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
The string literal
scope 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 $doubleQuoted;
will print an indented: If your string literal does not contain variables or escape sequences, it should be defined using single quotes to make that fact clear. For more information on PHP string literals and available escape sequences see the PHP core documentation. Loading history...
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| 124 | 31 | if (empty ($scope)) { |
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| 125 | 24 | $this->title = str_format (localize ("search.result"), $this->query); |
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0 ignored issues
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show
Coding Style
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
The string literal
search.result 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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| 126 | 24 | } else { |
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| 127 | // Comment to help the perl i18n script |
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| 128 | // str_format (localize ("search.result.author"), $this->query) |
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0 ignored issues
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Unused Code
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
54% 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. Loading history...
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| 129 | // str_format (localize ("search.result.tag"), $this->query) |
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0 ignored issues
–
show
Unused Code
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
54% 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. Loading history...
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| 130 | // str_format (localize ("search.result.series"), $this->query) |
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0 ignored issues
–
show
Unused Code
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
54% 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. Loading history...
|
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| 131 | // str_format (localize ("search.result.book"), $this->query) |
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0 ignored issues
–
show
Unused Code
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
54% 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. Loading history...
|
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| 132 | // str_format (localize ("search.result.publisher"), $this->query) |
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0 ignored issues
–
show
Unused Code
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
54% 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. Loading history...
|
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| 133 | 7 | $this->title = str_format (localize ("search.result.{$scope}"), $this->query); |
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0 ignored issues
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show
As per coding-style, please use concatenation or
sprintf for the variable $scope 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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| 134 | } |
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| 135 | |||
| 136 | 31 | $crit = "%" . $this->query . "%"; |
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0 ignored issues
–
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 $doubleQuoted;
will print an indented: If your string literal does not contain variables or escape sequences, it should be defined using single quotes to make that fact clear. For more information on PHP string literals and available escape sequences see the PHP core documentation. Loading history...
|
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| 137 | |||
| 138 | // Special case when we are doing a search and no database is selected |
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| 139 | 31 | if (Base::noDatabaseSelected () && !$this->useTypeahead ()) { |
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| 140 | 2 | $i = 0; |
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| 141 | 2 | foreach (Base::getDbNameList () as $key) { |
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| 142 | 2 | Base::clearDb (); |
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| 143 | 2 | list ($array, $totalNumber) = Book::getBooksByQuery (array ("all" => $crit), 1, $i, 1); |
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0 ignored issues
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show
The assignment to
$array is unused. Consider omitting it like so list($first,,$third).
This checks looks for assignemnts to variables using the Consider the following code example. <?php
function returnThreeValues() {
return array('a', 'b', 'c');
}
list($a, $b, $c) = returnThreeValues();
print $a . " - " . $c;
Only the variables Instead, the list call could have been. list($a,, $c) = returnThreeValues();
Loading history...
Coding Style
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
The string literal
all 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 $doubleQuoted;
will print an indented: If your string literal does not contain variables or escape sequences, it should be defined using single quotes to make that fact clear. For more information on PHP string literals and available escape sequences see the PHP core documentation. Loading history...
|
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| 144 | 2 | array_push ($this->entryArray, new Entry ($key, DB . ":query:{$i}", |
|
| 145 | 2 | str_format (localize ("bookword", $totalNumber), $totalNumber), "text", |
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0 ignored issues
–
show
Coding Style
Comprehensibility
introduced
by
The string literal
bookword 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
text 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 $doubleQuoted;
will print an indented: If your string literal does not contain variables or escape sequences, it should be defined using single quotes to make that fact clear. For more information on PHP string literals and available escape sequences see the PHP core documentation. Loading history...
|
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| 146 | 2 | array ( new LinkNavigation ("?" . DB . "={$i}&page=9&query=" . $this->query)), "", $totalNumber)); |
|
|
0 ignored issues
–
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...
As per coding-style, please use concatenation or
sprintf for the variable $i 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...
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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| 147 | 2 | $i++; |
|
| 148 | 2 | } |
|
| 149 | 2 | return; |
|
| 150 | } |
||
| 151 | 29 | if (empty ($scope)) { |
|
| 152 | 22 | $this->doSearchByCategory (); |
|
| 153 | 22 | return; |
|
| 154 | } |
||
| 155 | |||
| 156 | 7 | $array = $this->searchByScope ($scope); |
|
| 157 | 7 | if (count ($array) == 2 && is_array ($array [0])) { |
|
| 158 | 2 | list ($this->entryArray, $this->totalNumber) = $array; |
|
| 159 | 2 | } else { |
|
| 160 | 5 | $this->entryArray = $array; |
|
| 161 | } |
||
| 162 | 7 | } |
|
| 163 | } |
||
| 164 |
You can fix this by adding a namespace to your class:
When choosing a vendor namespace, try to pick something that is not too generic to avoid conflicts with other libraries.