Completed
Push — master ( ae0f54...3a96c8 )
by mains
02:54
created

jodel-web.php ➔ setLocation()   B

Complexity

Conditions 5
Paths 4

Size

Total Lines 47
Code Lines 29

Duplication

Lines 0
Ratio 0 %

Importance

Changes 0
Metric Value
cc 5
eloc 29
nc 4
nop 2
dl 0
loc 47
rs 8.5125
c 0
b 0
f 0
1
<?php
0 ignored issues
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Coding Style Compatibility introduced by
For compatibility and reusability of your code, PSR1 recommends that a file should introduce either new symbols (like classes, functions, etc.) or have side-effects (like outputting something, or including other files), but not both at the same time. The first symbol is defined on line 24 and the first side effect is on line 2.

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.

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2
error_reporting(-1);
3
include 'php/DatabaseConnect.php';
4
include 'php/Requests/AbstractRequest.php';
5
include 'php/Requests/CreateUser.php';
6
include 'php/AccountData.php';
7
include 'php/Location.php';
8
include 'php/Requests/GetPosts.php';
9
include 'php/Requests/GetKarma.php';
10
include 'php/Requests/UpdateLocation.php';
11
include 'php/Requests/Upvote.php';
12
include 'php/Requests/Downvote.php';
13
include 'php/Requests/GetPostDetails.php';
14
include 'php/Requests/SendJodel.php';
15
include 'php/Requests/GetCaptcha.php';
16
include 'php/Requests/PostCaptcha.php';
17
include 'php/Requests/GetUserConfig.php';
18
19
require_once 'php/Requests/libary/Requests.php';
20
Requests::register_autoloader();
21
22
$lastPostId = '';
23
24
function isAccountVerified($accessToken_forId1)
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Documentation introduced by
The return type could not be reliably inferred; please add a @return annotation.

Our type inference engine in quite powerful, but sometimes the code does not provide enough clues to go by. In these cases we request you to add a @return annotation as described here.

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25
{
26
	$accountCreator = new GetUserConfig();
27
	$accountCreator->setAccessToken($accessToken_forId1);
28
	$data = $accountCreator->execute();
29
30
	return $data['verified'];
31
}
32
33
function showCaptcha($accessToken_forId1)
34
{
35
	$accountCreator = new GetCaptcha();
36
	$accountCreator->setAccessToken($accessToken_forId1);
37
	$captcha = $accountCreator->execute();
38
39
	echo $captcha['image_url'];
40
	echo('<br><img width="100%" src="' . $captcha['image_url'] . '">');
41
	echo "<br>Key: " . $captcha['key'];
0 ignored issues
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Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal <br>Key: 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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.

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42
	echo "<br>";
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Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal <br> 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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.

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43
44
	//Form
45
	
46
	echo '<form method="get">';
47
	echo	'<p>Enter Key (copy pasta from top): <input type="text" name="key" /></p>';
48
	echo	'<p>Find the Coons (example: they are on picture 3, 4 and 5. You enter 2-3-4. Becouse we start counting at 0): <input type="text" name="solution" /></p>';
0 ignored issues
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Coding Style introduced by
This line exceeds maximum limit of 120 characters; contains 160 characters

Overly long lines are hard to read on any screen. Most code styles therefor impose a maximum limit on the number of characters in a line.

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49
	echo	'<p><input type="submit" /></p>';
50
	echo '</form>';
51
52
	die();
0 ignored issues
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Coding Style Compatibility introduced by
The function showCaptcha() contains an exit expression.

An exit expression should only be used in rare cases. For example, if you write a short command line script.

In most cases however, using an exit expression makes the code untestable and often causes incompatibilities with other libraries. Thus, unless you are absolutely sure it is required here, we recommend to refactor your code to avoid its usage.

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53
	
54
}
55
56
function verifyCaptcha($accessToken_forId1)
0 ignored issues
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Documentation introduced by
The return type could not be reliably inferred; please add a @return annotation.

Our type inference engine in quite powerful, but sometimes the code does not provide enough clues to go by. In these cases we request you to add a @return annotation as described here.

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Coding Style introduced by
verifyCaptcha uses the super-global variable $_GET which is generally not recommended.

Instead of super-globals, we recommend to explicitly inject the dependencies of your class. This makes your code less dependent on global state and it becomes generally more testable:

// Bad
class Router
{
    public function generate($path)
    {
        return $_SERVER['HOST'].$path;
    }
}

// Better
class Router
{
    private $host;

    public function __construct($host)
    {
        $this->host = $host;
    }

    public function generate($path)
    {
        return $this->host.$path;
    }
}

class Controller
{
    public function myAction(Request $request)
    {
        // Instead of
        $page = isset($_GET['page']) ? intval($_GET['page']) : 1;

        // Better (assuming you use the Symfony2 request)
        $page = $request->query->get('page', 1);
    }
}
Loading history...
57
{
58
	$solution = $_GET['solution'];
59
	$solution = array_map('intval', explode('-', $solution));
60
61
	$accountCreator = new PostCaptcha();
62
	$accountCreator->setAccessToken($accessToken_forId1);
63
	$accountCreator->captchaKey = $_GET['key'];
0 ignored issues
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Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 6 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

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64
	$accountCreator->captchaSolution = $solution;
65
	$verified = $accountCreator->execute();
0 ignored issues
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Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 24 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

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66
67
	return $verified['verified'];
68
}
69
70
function setLocation($accessToken, $deviceUid)
0 ignored issues
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Documentation introduced by
The return type could not be reliably inferred; please add a @return annotation.

Our type inference engine in quite powerful, but sometimes the code does not provide enough clues to go by. In these cases we request you to add a @return annotation as described here.

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Coding Style introduced by
setLocation uses the super-global variable $_GET which is generally not recommended.

Instead of super-globals, we recommend to explicitly inject the dependencies of your class. This makes your code less dependent on global state and it becomes generally more testable:

// Bad
class Router
{
    public function generate($path)
    {
        return $_SERVER['HOST'].$path;
    }
}

// Better
class Router
{
    private $host;

    public function __construct($host)
    {
        $this->host = $host;
    }

    public function generate($path)
    {
        return $this->host.$path;
    }
}

class Controller
{
    public function myAction(Request $request)
    {
        // Instead of
        $page = isset($_GET['page']) ? intval($_GET['page']) : 1;

        // Better (assuming you use the Symfony2 request)
        $page = $request->query->get('page', 1);
    }
}
Loading history...
Coding Style introduced by
setLocation uses the super-global variable $_SERVER which is generally not recommended.

Instead of super-globals, we recommend to explicitly inject the dependencies of your class. This makes your code less dependent on global state and it becomes generally more testable:

// Bad
class Router
{
    public function generate($path)
    {
        return $_SERVER['HOST'].$path;
    }
}

// Better
class Router
{
    private $host;

    public function __construct($host)
    {
        $this->host = $host;
    }

    public function generate($path)
    {
        return $this->host.$path;
    }
}

class Controller
{
    public function myAction(Request $request)
    {
        // Instead of
        $page = isset($_GET['page']) ? intval($_GET['page']) : 1;

        // Better (assuming you use the Symfony2 request)
        $page = $request->query->get('page', 1);
    }
}
Loading history...
71
{
72
	$url = 'https://maps.googleapis.com/maps/api/geocode/json?address=' . htmlspecialchars($_GET['city']) . '&key=AIzaSyCwhnja-or07012HqrhPW7prHEDuSvFT4w';
0 ignored issues
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Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 4 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

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Coding Style introduced by
This line exceeds maximum limit of 120 characters; contains 152 characters

Overly long lines are hard to read on any screen. Most code styles therefor impose a maximum limit on the number of characters in a line.

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73
	$result = Requests::post($url);
74
	if(json_decode($result->body, true)['status'] == 'ZERO_RESULTS' || json_decode($result->body, true)['status'] == 'INVALID_REQUEST')
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Coding Style introduced by
This line exceeds maximum limit of 120 characters; contains 132 characters

Overly long lines are hard to read on any screen. Most code styles therefor impose a maximum limit on the number of characters in a line.

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75
	{
76
		return "0 results";
0 ignored issues
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Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal 0 results 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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...
77
	}
78
	else
79
	{
80
		$name = json_decode($result->body, true)['results']['0']['address_components']['0']['long_name'];
81
		$lat = json_decode($result->body, true)['results']['0']['geometry']['location']['lat'];
0 ignored issues
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Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 2 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

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82
		$lng = json_decode($result->body, true)['results']['0']['geometry']['location']['lng'];
0 ignored issues
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Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 2 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

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83
84
		$location = new Location();
85
		$location->setLat($lat);
86
		$location->setLng($lng);
87
		$location->setCityName($name);
88
		$accountCreator = new UpdateLocation();
89
		$accountCreator->setLocation($location);
90
		$accountCreator->setAccessToken($accessToken);
91
		$data = $accountCreator->execute();
92
93
		//safe location to db
94
		$db = new DatabaseConnect();
0 ignored issues
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Comprehensibility introduced by
Avoid variables with short names like $db. Configured minimum length is 3.

Short variable names may make your code harder to understand. Variable names should be self-descriptive. This check looks for variable names who are shorter than a configured minimum.

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95
96
		if($data == 'Success')
97
		{
98
			$result = $db->query("UPDATE accounts 
99
					SET name='" . $name . "',
100
						lat='" . $lat . "',
101
						lng='" . $lng . "'
102
					WHERE access_token='" . $accessToken . "'");
103
104
			if($result === false)
105
			{
106
					echo "Updating location failed: (" . $db->errno . ") " . $db->error;
0 ignored issues
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Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal Updating location failed: ( 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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.

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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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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.

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107
			}
108
			else
109
			{
110
				error_log('User with JodelDeviceId:' . $deviceUid .  ' [' . $_SERVER['REMOTE_ADDR'] . '][' . $_SERVER ['HTTP_USER_AGENT'] . '] changed to Location: ' . $name);
0 ignored issues
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Coding Style introduced by
This line exceeds maximum limit of 120 characters; contains 163 characters

Overly long lines are hard to read on any screen. Most code styles therefor impose a maximum limit on the number of characters in a line.

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111
			}
112
		}
113
114
		return $name;
115
	}
116
}
117
118
function votePostId($deviceUid_forId1, $accessToken_forId1)
0 ignored issues
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Coding Style introduced by
votePostId uses the super-global variable $_GET which is generally not recommended.

Instead of super-globals, we recommend to explicitly inject the dependencies of your class. This makes your code less dependent on global state and it becomes generally more testable:

// Bad
class Router
{
    public function generate($path)
    {
        return $_SERVER['HOST'].$path;
    }
}

// Better
class Router
{
    private $host;

    public function __construct($host)
    {
        $this->host = $host;
    }

    public function generate($path)
    {
        return $this->host.$path;
    }
}

class Controller
{
    public function myAction(Request $request)
    {
        // Instead of
        $page = isset($_GET['page']) ? intval($_GET['page']) : 1;

        // Better (assuming you use the Symfony2 request)
        $page = $request->query->get('page', 1);
    }
}
Loading history...
119
{
120
	if(!isAccountVerified($accessToken_forId1))
121
	{
122
		showCaptcha($accessToken_forId1);
123
	}
124
125
	if(!deviceUidHasVotedThisPostId($deviceUid_forId1, $_GET['postID']))
126
	{
127 View Code Duplication
		if($_GET['vote'] == "up")
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Duplication introduced by
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.

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Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal up 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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...
128
		{
129
			$accountCreator = new Upvote();
130
		}
131
		else if($_GET['vote'] == "down")
0 ignored issues
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Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal down 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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...
132
		{
133
			$accountCreator = new Downvote();
134
		}
135
		$accountCreator->setAccessToken($accessToken_forId1);
0 ignored issues
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Bug introduced by
The variable $accountCreator does not seem to be defined for all execution paths leading up to this point.

If you define a variable conditionally, it can happen that it is not defined for all execution paths.

Let’s take a look at an example:

function myFunction($a) {
    switch ($a) {
        case 'foo':
            $x = 1;
            break;

        case 'bar':
            $x = 2;
            break;
    }

    // $x is potentially undefined here.
    echo $x;
}

In the above example, the variable $x is defined if you pass “foo” or “bar” as argument for $a. However, since the switch statement has no default case statement, if you pass any other value, the variable $x would be undefined.

Available Fixes

  1. Check for existence of the variable explicitly:

    function myFunction($a) {
        switch ($a) {
            case 'foo':
                $x = 1;
                break;
    
            case 'bar':
                $x = 2;
                break;
        }
    
        if (isset($x)) { // Make sure it's always set.
            echo $x;
        }
    }
    
  2. Define a default value for the variable:

    function myFunction($a) {
        $x = ''; // Set a default which gets overridden for certain paths.
        switch ($a) {
            case 'foo':
                $x = 1;
                break;
    
            case 'bar':
                $x = 2;
                break;
        }
    
        echo $x;
    }
    
  3. Add a value for the missing path:

    function myFunction($a) {
        switch ($a) {
            case 'foo':
                $x = 1;
                break;
    
            case 'bar':
                $x = 2;
                break;
    
            // We add support for the missing case.
            default:
                $x = '';
                break;
        }
    
        echo $x;
    }
    
Loading history...
136
		$accountCreator->postId = htmlspecialchars($_GET['postID']);
137
		$data = $accountCreator->execute();
0 ignored issues
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Unused Code introduced by
$data is not used, you could remove the assignment.

This check looks for variable assignements that are either overwritten by other assignments or where the variable is not used subsequently.

$myVar = 'Value';
$higher = false;

if (rand(1, 6) > 3) {
    $higher = true;
} else {
    $higher = false;
}

Both the $myVar assignment in line 1 and the $higher assignment in line 2 are dead. The first because $myVar is never used and the second because $higher is always overwritten for every possible time line.

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Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 19 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
138
139
140
		addVoteWithPostIdAndTypeToDeviceUid($_GET['postID'], $_GET['vote'], $deviceUid_forId1);
141
	}
142
143
	
144
	if(isset($_GET['getPostDetails']) && isset($_GET['getPostDetails']))
145
	{
146
		header('Location: index.php?getPostDetails=true&postID=' . htmlspecialchars($_GET['postID_parent']) . '#postId-' . htmlspecialchars($_GET['postID']));
0 ignored issues
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Coding Style introduced by
This line exceeds maximum limit of 120 characters; contains 152 characters

Overly long lines are hard to read on any screen. Most code styles therefor impose a maximum limit on the number of characters in a line.

Loading history...
147
	}
148
	else
149
	{
150
		header("Location: index.php#postId-" . htmlspecialchars($_GET['postID']));
0 ignored issues
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Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal Location: index.php#postId- 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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...
151
	}	
152
	die();
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style Compatibility introduced by
The function votePostId() contains an exit expression.

An exit expression should only be used in rare cases. For example, if you write a short command line script.

In most cases however, using an exit expression makes the code untestable and often causes incompatibilities with other libraries. Thus, unless you are absolutely sure it is required here, we recommend to refactor your code to avoid its usage.

Loading history...
153
}
154
155
function sendJodel($location, $accessToken_forId1)
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
sendJodel uses the super-global variable $_POST which is generally not recommended.

Instead of super-globals, we recommend to explicitly inject the dependencies of your class. This makes your code less dependent on global state and it becomes generally more testable:

// Bad
class Router
{
    public function generate($path)
    {
        return $_SERVER['HOST'].$path;
    }
}

// Better
class Router
{
    private $host;

    public function __construct($host)
    {
        $this->host = $host;
    }

    public function generate($path)
    {
        return $this->host.$path;
    }
}

class Controller
{
    public function myAction(Request $request)
    {
        // Instead of
        $page = isset($_GET['page']) ? intval($_GET['page']) : 1;

        // Better (assuming you use the Symfony2 request)
        $page = $request->query->get('page', 1);
    }
}
Loading history...
Coding Style introduced by
sendJodel uses the super-global variable $_SERVER which is generally not recommended.

Instead of super-globals, we recommend to explicitly inject the dependencies of your class. This makes your code less dependent on global state and it becomes generally more testable:

// Bad
class Router
{
    public function generate($path)
    {
        return $_SERVER['HOST'].$path;
    }
}

// Better
class Router
{
    private $host;

    public function __construct($host)
    {
        $this->host = $host;
    }

    public function generate($path)
    {
        return $this->host.$path;
    }
}

class Controller
{
    public function myAction(Request $request)
    {
        // Instead of
        $page = isset($_GET['page']) ? intval($_GET['page']) : 1;

        // Better (assuming you use the Symfony2 request)
        $page = $request->query->get('page', 1);
    }
}
Loading history...
156
{
157
	if(!isAccountVerified($accessToken_forId1))
158
	{
159
		showCaptcha($accessToken_forId1);
160
	}
161
162
	$accountCreator = new SendJodel();
163
164
	if(isset($_POST['ancestor']))
165
	{
166
		$ancestor = $_POST['ancestor'];
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 17 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
167
		$accountCreator->ancestor = $ancestor;
168
	}
169
	if(isset($_POST['color']))
170
	{
171
		$color = $_POST['color'];
172
		switch ($color) {
173
			case '8ABDB0':
174
				$color = '8ABDB0';
175
				break;
176
			case '9EC41C':
177
				$color = '9EC41C';
178
				break;
179
			case '06A3CB':
180
				$color = '06A3CB';
181
				break;
182
			case 'FFBA00':
183
				$color = 'FFBA00';
184
				break;
185
			case 'DD5F5F':
186
				$color = 'DD5F5F';
187
				break;
188
			case 'FF9908':
189
				$color = 'FF9908';
190
				break;
191
			default:
192
				$color = '8ABDB0';
193
				break;
194
		}
195
		$accountCreator->color = $color;
196
	}
197
198
	$accountCreatorLocation = new UpdateLocation();
0 ignored issues
show
Comprehensibility Naming introduced by
The variable name $accountCreatorLocation exceeds the maximum configured length of 20.

Very long variable names usually make code harder to read. It is therefore recommended not to make variable names too verbose.

Loading history...
199
	$accountCreatorLocation->setLocation($location);
200
	$accountCreatorLocation->setAccessToken($accessToken_forId1);
201
	$data = $accountCreatorLocation->execute();
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
$data is not used, you could remove the assignment.

This check looks for variable assignements that are either overwritten by other assignments or where the variable is not used subsequently.

$myVar = 'Value';
$higher = false;

if (rand(1, 6) > 3) {
    $higher = true;
} else {
    $higher = false;
}

Both the $myVar assignment in line 1 and the $higher assignment in line 2 are dead. The first because $myVar is never used and the second because $higher is always overwritten for every possible time line.

Loading history...
202
	
203
	$accountCreator->location = $location;
204
	
205
	$accountCreator->setAccessToken($accessToken_forId1);
206
	$data = $accountCreator->execute();
207
208
	if(isset($_POST['ancestor']))
209
	{
210
		$actual_link = 'http://' . $_SERVER['HTTP_HOST'] . $_SERVER['REQUEST_URI'];
211
		header('Location: ' . $actual_link . '#postId-' . htmlspecialchars($data['post_id']));
212
		exit;
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style Compatibility introduced by
The function sendJodel() contains an exit expression.

An exit expression should only be used in rare cases. For example, if you write a short command line script.

In most cases however, using an exit expression makes the code untestable and often causes incompatibilities with other libraries. Thus, unless you are absolutely sure it is required here, we recommend to refactor your code to avoid its usage.

Loading history...
213
	}
214
	else
215
	{
216
		header('Location: ./#');
217
		exit;
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style Compatibility introduced by
The function sendJodel() contains an exit expression.

An exit expression should only be used in rare cases. For example, if you write a short command line script.

In most cases however, using an exit expression makes the code untestable and often causes incompatibilities with other libraries. Thus, unless you are absolutely sure it is required here, we recommend to refactor your code to avoid its usage.

Loading history...
218
	}
219
}
220
221
function isDeviceUidInDatabase($deviceUid)
222
{
223
	$db = new DatabaseConnect();  
0 ignored issues
show
Comprehensibility introduced by
Avoid variables with short names like $db. Configured minimum length is 3.

Short variable names may make your code harder to understand. Variable names should be self-descriptive. This check looks for variable names who are shorter than a configured minimum.

Loading history...
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 5 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
224
	$result = $db->query("SELECT * FROM accounts WHERE device_uid='" . $deviceUid  . "'");
225
226
	if ($result->num_rows > 0)
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
The if-else statement can be simplified to return $result->num_rows > 0;.
Loading history...
227
	{
228
		return TRUE;
229
	}
230
	else
231
	{
232
		return FALSE;
233
	}
234
}
235
236 View Code Duplication
function isTokenFresh(Location $location)
0 ignored issues
show
Documentation introduced by
The return type could not be reliably inferred; please add a @return annotation.

Our type inference engine in quite powerful, but sometimes the code does not provide enough clues to go by. In these cases we request you to add a @return annotation as described here.

Loading history...
Duplication introduced by
This function seems to be duplicated in 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...
237
{
238
	$db = new DatabaseConnect();  
0 ignored issues
show
Comprehensibility introduced by
Avoid variables with short names like $db. Configured minimum length is 3.

Short variable names may make your code harder to understand. Variable names should be self-descriptive. This check looks for variable names who are shorter than a configured minimum.

Loading history...
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 5 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
239
	$result = $db->query("SELECT * FROM accounts WHERE id='1'");
240
	
241
	$access_token;
0 ignored issues
show
Bug introduced by
The variable $access_token seems only to be defined at a later point. Did you maybe move this code here without moving the variable definition?

This error can happen if you refactor code and forget to move the variable initialization.

Let’s take a look at a simple example:

function someFunction() {
    $x = 5;
    echo $x;
}

The above code is perfectly fine. Now imagine that we re-order the statements:

function someFunction() {
    echo $x;
    $x = 5;
}

In that case, $x would be read before it is initialized. This was a very basic example, however the principle is the same for the found issue.

Loading history...
242
243
	if ($result->num_rows > 0)
244
	{
245
			// output data of each row
246
			while($row = $result->fetch_assoc()) {
247
					//$access_token = $row["access_token"];
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code Comprehensibility introduced by
67% 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...
248
					$expiration_date = $row["expiration_date"];
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal expiration_date 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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...
249
					$deviceUid = $row["device_uid"];
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 7 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal device_uid 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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...
250
					$access_token = $row["access_token"];
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 4 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal access_token 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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...
251
			}
252
	}
253
	else
254
	{
255
			echo '0 results';
256
	}
257
258
	if($expiration_date <= time()) {
0 ignored issues
show
Bug introduced by
The variable $expiration_date does not seem to be defined for all execution paths leading up to this point.

If you define a variable conditionally, it can happen that it is not defined for all execution paths.

Let’s take a look at an example:

function myFunction($a) {
    switch ($a) {
        case 'foo':
            $x = 1;
            break;

        case 'bar':
            $x = 2;
            break;
    }

    // $x is potentially undefined here.
    echo $x;
}

In the above example, the variable $x is defined if you pass “foo” or “bar” as argument for $a. However, since the switch statement has no default case statement, if you pass any other value, the variable $x would be undefined.

Available Fixes

  1. Check for existence of the variable explicitly:

    function myFunction($a) {
        switch ($a) {
            case 'foo':
                $x = 1;
                break;
    
            case 'bar':
                $x = 2;
                break;
        }
    
        if (isset($x)) { // Make sure it's always set.
            echo $x;
        }
    }
    
  2. Define a default value for the variable:

    function myFunction($a) {
        $x = ''; // Set a default which gets overridden for certain paths.
        switch ($a) {
            case 'foo':
                $x = 1;
                break;
    
            case 'bar':
                $x = 2;
                break;
        }
    
        echo $x;
    }
    
  3. Add a value for the missing path:

    function myFunction($a) {
        switch ($a) {
            case 'foo':
                $x = 1;
                break;
    
            case 'bar':
                $x = 2;
                break;
    
            // We add support for the missing case.
            default:
                $x = '';
                break;
        }
    
        echo $x;
    }
    
Loading history...
259
		$accountCreator = new CreateUser();
260
		$accountCreator->setAccessToken($access_token);//$accountData->getAccessToken());
0 ignored issues
show
Bug introduced by
The variable $access_token does not seem to be defined for all execution paths leading up to this point.

If you define a variable conditionally, it can happen that it is not defined for all execution paths.

Let’s take a look at an example:

function myFunction($a) {
    switch ($a) {
        case 'foo':
            $x = 1;
            break;

        case 'bar':
            $x = 2;
            break;
    }

    // $x is potentially undefined here.
    echo $x;
}

In the above example, the variable $x is defined if you pass “foo” or “bar” as argument for $a. However, since the switch statement has no default case statement, if you pass any other value, the variable $x would be undefined.

Available Fixes

  1. Check for existence of the variable explicitly:

    function myFunction($a) {
        switch ($a) {
            case 'foo':
                $x = 1;
                break;
    
            case 'bar':
                $x = 2;
                break;
        }
    
        if (isset($x)) { // Make sure it's always set.
            echo $x;
        }
    }
    
  2. Define a default value for the variable:

    function myFunction($a) {
        $x = ''; // Set a default which gets overridden for certain paths.
        switch ($a) {
            case 'foo':
                $x = 1;
                break;
    
            case 'bar':
                $x = 2;
                break;
        }
    
        echo $x;
    }
    
  3. Add a value for the missing path:

    function myFunction($a) {
        switch ($a) {
            case 'foo':
                $x = 1;
                break;
    
            case 'bar':
                $x = 2;
                break;
    
            // We add support for the missing case.
            default:
                $x = '';
                break;
        }
    
        echo $x;
    }
    
Loading history...
Unused Code Comprehensibility introduced by
86% 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...
261
		$accountCreator->setDeviceUid($deviceUid);
0 ignored issues
show
Bug introduced by
The variable $deviceUid does not seem to be defined for all execution paths leading up to this point.

If you define a variable conditionally, it can happen that it is not defined for all execution paths.

Let’s take a look at an example:

function myFunction($a) {
    switch ($a) {
        case 'foo':
            $x = 1;
            break;

        case 'bar':
            $x = 2;
            break;
    }

    // $x is potentially undefined here.
    echo $x;
}

In the above example, the variable $x is defined if you pass “foo” or “bar” as argument for $a. However, since the switch statement has no default case statement, if you pass any other value, the variable $x would be undefined.

Available Fixes

  1. Check for existence of the variable explicitly:

    function myFunction($a) {
        switch ($a) {
            case 'foo':
                $x = 1;
                break;
    
            case 'bar':
                $x = 2;
                break;
        }
    
        if (isset($x)) { // Make sure it's always set.
            echo $x;
        }
    }
    
  2. Define a default value for the variable:

    function myFunction($a) {
        $x = ''; // Set a default which gets overridden for certain paths.
        switch ($a) {
            case 'foo':
                $x = 1;
                break;
    
            case 'bar':
                $x = 2;
                break;
        }
    
        echo $x;
    }
    
  3. Add a value for the missing path:

    function myFunction($a) {
        switch ($a) {
            case 'foo':
                $x = 1;
                break;
    
            case 'bar':
                $x = 2;
                break;
    
            // We add support for the missing case.
            default:
                $x = '';
                break;
        }
    
        echo $x;
    }
    
Loading history...
262
		$accountCreator->setLocation($location);
263
		$data = $accountCreator->execute();
264
265
		$access_token = (string)$data[0]['access_token'];
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 4 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
266
		$expiration_date = $data[0]['expiration_date'];
267
		$device_uid = (string)$data[1];
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 6 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
268
		
269
		$db = new DatabaseConnect();  
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 5 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
270
		$result = $db->query("UPDATE accounts 
271
								SET access_token='" . $access_token . "',
272
									expiration_date='" . $expiration_date . "'
273
								WHERE device_uid='" . $device_uid . "'");
274
275
		if($result === false){
276
				echo "Adding account failed: (" . $db->errno . ") " . $db->error;
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal Adding account failed: ( 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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...
277
		}	
278
	}
279
	
280
	return $access_token;
281
}
282
283 View Code Duplication
function isTokenFreshByAccessToken(Location $location, $accessToken)
0 ignored issues
show
Documentation introduced by
The return type could not be reliably inferred; please add a @return annotation.

Our type inference engine in quite powerful, but sometimes the code does not provide enough clues to go by. In these cases we request you to add a @return annotation as described here.

Loading history...
Duplication introduced by
This function seems to be duplicated in 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...
284
{
285
	$db = new DatabaseConnect();  
0 ignored issues
show
Comprehensibility introduced by
Avoid variables with short names like $db. Configured minimum length is 3.

Short variable names may make your code harder to understand. Variable names should be self-descriptive. This check looks for variable names who are shorter than a configured minimum.

Loading history...
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 5 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
286
	$result = $db->query("SELECT * FROM accounts WHERE access_token='" . $accessToken . "'");
287
	
288
	if ($result->num_rows > 0)
289
	{
290
			// output data of each row
291
			while($row = $result->fetch_assoc()) {
292
					//$access_token = $row["access_token"];
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code Comprehensibility introduced by
67% 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...
293
					$expiration_date = $row["expiration_date"];
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal expiration_date 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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...
294
					$deviceUid = $row["device_uid"];
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 7 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal device_uid 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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...
295
					$access_token = $row["access_token"];
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 4 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal access_token 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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...
296
			}
297
	}
298
	else
299
	{
300
			echo '0 results';
301
	}
302
303
	if($expiration_date <= time()) {
0 ignored issues
show
Bug introduced by
The variable $expiration_date does not seem to be defined for all execution paths leading up to this point.

If you define a variable conditionally, it can happen that it is not defined for all execution paths.

Let’s take a look at an example:

function myFunction($a) {
    switch ($a) {
        case 'foo':
            $x = 1;
            break;

        case 'bar':
            $x = 2;
            break;
    }

    // $x is potentially undefined here.
    echo $x;
}

In the above example, the variable $x is defined if you pass “foo” or “bar” as argument for $a. However, since the switch statement has no default case statement, if you pass any other value, the variable $x would be undefined.

Available Fixes

  1. Check for existence of the variable explicitly:

    function myFunction($a) {
        switch ($a) {
            case 'foo':
                $x = 1;
                break;
    
            case 'bar':
                $x = 2;
                break;
        }
    
        if (isset($x)) { // Make sure it's always set.
            echo $x;
        }
    }
    
  2. Define a default value for the variable:

    function myFunction($a) {
        $x = ''; // Set a default which gets overridden for certain paths.
        switch ($a) {
            case 'foo':
                $x = 1;
                break;
    
            case 'bar':
                $x = 2;
                break;
        }
    
        echo $x;
    }
    
  3. Add a value for the missing path:

    function myFunction($a) {
        switch ($a) {
            case 'foo':
                $x = 1;
                break;
    
            case 'bar':
                $x = 2;
                break;
    
            // We add support for the missing case.
            default:
                $x = '';
                break;
        }
    
        echo $x;
    }
    
Loading history...
304
		$accountCreator = new CreateUser();
305
		$accountCreator->setAccessToken($access_token);//$accountData->getAccessToken());
0 ignored issues
show
Bug introduced by
The variable $access_token does not seem to be defined for all execution paths leading up to this point.

If you define a variable conditionally, it can happen that it is not defined for all execution paths.

Let’s take a look at an example:

function myFunction($a) {
    switch ($a) {
        case 'foo':
            $x = 1;
            break;

        case 'bar':
            $x = 2;
            break;
    }

    // $x is potentially undefined here.
    echo $x;
}

In the above example, the variable $x is defined if you pass “foo” or “bar” as argument for $a. However, since the switch statement has no default case statement, if you pass any other value, the variable $x would be undefined.

Available Fixes

  1. Check for existence of the variable explicitly:

    function myFunction($a) {
        switch ($a) {
            case 'foo':
                $x = 1;
                break;
    
            case 'bar':
                $x = 2;
                break;
        }
    
        if (isset($x)) { // Make sure it's always set.
            echo $x;
        }
    }
    
  2. Define a default value for the variable:

    function myFunction($a) {
        $x = ''; // Set a default which gets overridden for certain paths.
        switch ($a) {
            case 'foo':
                $x = 1;
                break;
    
            case 'bar':
                $x = 2;
                break;
        }
    
        echo $x;
    }
    
  3. Add a value for the missing path:

    function myFunction($a) {
        switch ($a) {
            case 'foo':
                $x = 1;
                break;
    
            case 'bar':
                $x = 2;
                break;
    
            // We add support for the missing case.
            default:
                $x = '';
                break;
        }
    
        echo $x;
    }
    
Loading history...
Unused Code Comprehensibility introduced by
86% 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...
306
		$accountCreator->setDeviceUid($deviceUid);
0 ignored issues
show
Bug introduced by
The variable $deviceUid does not seem to be defined for all execution paths leading up to this point.

If you define a variable conditionally, it can happen that it is not defined for all execution paths.

Let’s take a look at an example:

function myFunction($a) {
    switch ($a) {
        case 'foo':
            $x = 1;
            break;

        case 'bar':
            $x = 2;
            break;
    }

    // $x is potentially undefined here.
    echo $x;
}

In the above example, the variable $x is defined if you pass “foo” or “bar” as argument for $a. However, since the switch statement has no default case statement, if you pass any other value, the variable $x would be undefined.

Available Fixes

  1. Check for existence of the variable explicitly:

    function myFunction($a) {
        switch ($a) {
            case 'foo':
                $x = 1;
                break;
    
            case 'bar':
                $x = 2;
                break;
        }
    
        if (isset($x)) { // Make sure it's always set.
            echo $x;
        }
    }
    
  2. Define a default value for the variable:

    function myFunction($a) {
        $x = ''; // Set a default which gets overridden for certain paths.
        switch ($a) {
            case 'foo':
                $x = 1;
                break;
    
            case 'bar':
                $x = 2;
                break;
        }
    
        echo $x;
    }
    
  3. Add a value for the missing path:

    function myFunction($a) {
        switch ($a) {
            case 'foo':
                $x = 1;
                break;
    
            case 'bar':
                $x = 2;
                break;
    
            // We add support for the missing case.
            default:
                $x = '';
                break;
        }
    
        echo $x;
    }
    
Loading history...
307
		$accountCreator->setLocation($location);
308
		$data = $accountCreator->execute();
309
310
		$access_token = (string)$data[0]['access_token'];
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 4 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
311
		$expiration_date = $data[0]['expiration_date'];
312
		$device_uid = (string)$data[1];
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 6 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
313
		
314
		$db = new DatabaseConnect();  
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 5 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
315
		$result = $db->query("UPDATE accounts 
316
								SET access_token='" . $access_token . "',
317
									expiration_date='" . $expiration_date . "'
318
								WHERE device_uid='" . $device_uid . "'");
319
320
		if($result === false){
321
				echo "Adding account failed: (" . $db->errno . ") " . $db->error;
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal Adding account failed: ( 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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...
322
		}	
323
	}
324
	
325
	return $access_token;
326
}
327
328 View Code Duplication
function isTokenFreshByDeviceUid(Location $location, $deviceUid)
0 ignored issues
show
Documentation introduced by
The return type could not be reliably inferred; please add a @return annotation.

Our type inference engine in quite powerful, but sometimes the code does not provide enough clues to go by. In these cases we request you to add a @return annotation as described here.

Loading history...
Duplication introduced by
This function seems to be duplicated in 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...
329
{
330
	$db = new DatabaseConnect();  
0 ignored issues
show
Comprehensibility introduced by
Avoid variables with short names like $db. Configured minimum length is 3.

Short variable names may make your code harder to understand. Variable names should be self-descriptive. This check looks for variable names who are shorter than a configured minimum.

Loading history...
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 5 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
331
	$result = $db->query("SELECT * FROM accounts WHERE device_uid='" . $deviceUid . "'");
332
333
	$access_token;
0 ignored issues
show
Bug introduced by
The variable $access_token seems only to be defined at a later point. Did you maybe move this code here without moving the variable definition?

This error can happen if you refactor code and forget to move the variable initialization.

Let’s take a look at a simple example:

function someFunction() {
    $x = 5;
    echo $x;
}

The above code is perfectly fine. Now imagine that we re-order the statements:

function someFunction() {
    echo $x;
    $x = 5;
}

In that case, $x would be read before it is initialized. This was a very basic example, however the principle is the same for the found issue.

Loading history...
334
335
	if ($result->num_rows > 0)
336
	{
337
			// output data of each row
338
			while($row = $result->fetch_assoc()) {
339
					//$access_token = $row["access_token"];
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code Comprehensibility introduced by
67% 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...
340
					$expiration_date = $row["expiration_date"];
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal expiration_date 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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...
341
					$deviceUid = $row["device_uid"];
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
Consider using a different name than the parameter $deviceUid. This often makes code more readable.
Loading history...
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 7 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal device_uid 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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...
342
					$access_token = $row["access_token"];
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 4 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal access_token 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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...
343
			}
344
	}
345
	else
346
	{
347
			echo '0 results';
348
	}
349
350
	if($expiration_date <= time()) {
0 ignored issues
show
Bug introduced by
The variable $expiration_date does not seem to be defined for all execution paths leading up to this point.

If you define a variable conditionally, it can happen that it is not defined for all execution paths.

Let’s take a look at an example:

function myFunction($a) {
    switch ($a) {
        case 'foo':
            $x = 1;
            break;

        case 'bar':
            $x = 2;
            break;
    }

    // $x is potentially undefined here.
    echo $x;
}

In the above example, the variable $x is defined if you pass “foo” or “bar” as argument for $a. However, since the switch statement has no default case statement, if you pass any other value, the variable $x would be undefined.

Available Fixes

  1. Check for existence of the variable explicitly:

    function myFunction($a) {
        switch ($a) {
            case 'foo':
                $x = 1;
                break;
    
            case 'bar':
                $x = 2;
                break;
        }
    
        if (isset($x)) { // Make sure it's always set.
            echo $x;
        }
    }
    
  2. Define a default value for the variable:

    function myFunction($a) {
        $x = ''; // Set a default which gets overridden for certain paths.
        switch ($a) {
            case 'foo':
                $x = 1;
                break;
    
            case 'bar':
                $x = 2;
                break;
        }
    
        echo $x;
    }
    
  3. Add a value for the missing path:

    function myFunction($a) {
        switch ($a) {
            case 'foo':
                $x = 1;
                break;
    
            case 'bar':
                $x = 2;
                break;
    
            // We add support for the missing case.
            default:
                $x = '';
                break;
        }
    
        echo $x;
    }
    
Loading history...
351
		$accountCreator = new CreateUser();
352
		$accountCreator->setAccessToken($access_token);
0 ignored issues
show
Bug introduced by
The variable $access_token does not seem to be defined for all execution paths leading up to this point.

If you define a variable conditionally, it can happen that it is not defined for all execution paths.

Let’s take a look at an example:

function myFunction($a) {
    switch ($a) {
        case 'foo':
            $x = 1;
            break;

        case 'bar':
            $x = 2;
            break;
    }

    // $x is potentially undefined here.
    echo $x;
}

In the above example, the variable $x is defined if you pass “foo” or “bar” as argument for $a. However, since the switch statement has no default case statement, if you pass any other value, the variable $x would be undefined.

Available Fixes

  1. Check for existence of the variable explicitly:

    function myFunction($a) {
        switch ($a) {
            case 'foo':
                $x = 1;
                break;
    
            case 'bar':
                $x = 2;
                break;
        }
    
        if (isset($x)) { // Make sure it's always set.
            echo $x;
        }
    }
    
  2. Define a default value for the variable:

    function myFunction($a) {
        $x = ''; // Set a default which gets overridden for certain paths.
        switch ($a) {
            case 'foo':
                $x = 1;
                break;
    
            case 'bar':
                $x = 2;
                break;
        }
    
        echo $x;
    }
    
  3. Add a value for the missing path:

    function myFunction($a) {
        switch ($a) {
            case 'foo':
                $x = 1;
                break;
    
            case 'bar':
                $x = 2;
                break;
    
            // We add support for the missing case.
            default:
                $x = '';
                break;
        }
    
        echo $x;
    }
    
Loading history...
353
		$accountCreator->setDeviceUid($deviceUid);
354
		$accountCreator->setLocation($location);
355
		$data = $accountCreator->execute();
356
357
		$access_token = (string)$data[0]['access_token'];
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 4 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
358
		$expiration_date = $data[0]['expiration_date'];
359
		$device_uid = (string)$data[1];
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 6 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
360
		
361
		$db = new DatabaseConnect();  
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 5 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
362
		$result = $db->query("UPDATE accounts 
363
								SET access_token='" . $access_token . "',
364
									expiration_date='" . $expiration_date . "'
365
								WHERE device_uid='" . $device_uid . "'");
366
367
		if($result === false){
368
				echo "Adding account failed: (" . $db->errno . ") " . $db->error;
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal Adding account failed: ( 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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...
369
		}	
370
	}
371
	
372
	return $access_token;
373
}
374
375 View Code Duplication
function getLocationByAccessToken($accessToken)
0 ignored issues
show
Duplication introduced by
This function seems to be duplicated in 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...
376
{
377
	$db = new DatabaseConnect();
0 ignored issues
show
Comprehensibility introduced by
Avoid variables with short names like $db. Configured minimum length is 3.

Short variable names may make your code harder to understand. Variable names should be self-descriptive. This check looks for variable names who are shorter than a configured minimum.

Loading history...
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 5 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
378
	$result = $db->query("SELECT * FROM accounts WHERE access_token='" . $accessToken  . "'");
379
	
380
	$location = new Location();
381
	
382
	if ($result->num_rows > 0)
383
	{
384
		// output data of each row
385
		while($row = $result->fetch_assoc())
386
		{
387
			$location->setLat($row['lat']);
388
			$location->setLng($row['lng']);
389
			$location->setCityName($row['name']);
390
		}
391
	}
392
	else
393
	{
394
		echo "Error: 0 results";
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal Error: 0 results 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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...
395
	}
396
397
	return $location;
398
}
399
400 View Code Duplication
function getLocationByDeviceUid($deviceUid)
0 ignored issues
show
Duplication introduced by
This function seems to be duplicated in 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...
401
{
402
	$db = new DatabaseConnect();
0 ignored issues
show
Comprehensibility introduced by
Avoid variables with short names like $db. Configured minimum length is 3.

Short variable names may make your code harder to understand. Variable names should be self-descriptive. This check looks for variable names who are shorter than a configured minimum.

Loading history...
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 5 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
403
	$result = $db->query("SELECT * FROM accounts WHERE device_uid='" . $deviceUid  . "'");
404
	
405
	$location = new Location();
406
	
407
	if ($result->num_rows > 0)
408
	{
409
		// output data of each row
410
		while($row = $result->fetch_assoc())
411
		{
412
			$location->setLat($row['lat']);
413
			$location->setLng($row['lng']);
414
			$location->setCityName($row['name']);
415
		}
416
	}
417
	else
418
	{
419
		echo "Error: 0 results";
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal Error: 0 results 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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...
420
	}
421
422
	return $location;
423
}
424
425 View Code Duplication
function getDeviceUidByAccessToken($accesstoken)
0 ignored issues
show
Documentation introduced by
The return type could not be reliably inferred; please add a @return annotation.

Our type inference engine in quite powerful, but sometimes the code does not provide enough clues to go by. In these cases we request you to add a @return annotation as described here.

Loading history...
Duplication introduced by
This function seems to be duplicated in 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...
426
{
427
	$db = new DatabaseConnect();
0 ignored issues
show
Comprehensibility introduced by
Avoid variables with short names like $db. Configured minimum length is 3.

Short variable names may make your code harder to understand. Variable names should be self-descriptive. This check looks for variable names who are shorter than a configured minimum.

Loading history...
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 5 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
428
	$result = $db->query("SELECT device_uid FROM accounts WHERE access_token='" . $accesstoken  . "'");
429
	
430
	$deviceUid;
0 ignored issues
show
Bug introduced by
The variable $deviceUid seems only to be defined at a later point. Did you maybe move this code here without moving the variable definition?

This error can happen if you refactor code and forget to move the variable initialization.

Let’s take a look at a simple example:

function someFunction() {
    $x = 5;
    echo $x;
}

The above code is perfectly fine. Now imagine that we re-order the statements:

function someFunction() {
    echo $x;
    $x = 5;
}

In that case, $x would be read before it is initialized. This was a very basic example, however the principle is the same for the found issue.

Loading history...
431
	
432
	if ($result->num_rows > 0)
433
	{
434
		// output data of each row
435
		while($row = $result->fetch_assoc())
436
		{
437
			$deviceUid = $row['device_uid'];
438
		}
439
	}
440
	else
441
	{
442
		echo "Error: 0 results";
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal Error: 0 results 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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...
443
	}
444
445
	return $deviceUid;
0 ignored issues
show
Bug introduced by
The variable $deviceUid does not seem to be defined for all execution paths leading up to this point.

If you define a variable conditionally, it can happen that it is not defined for all execution paths.

Let’s take a look at an example:

function myFunction($a) {
    switch ($a) {
        case 'foo':
            $x = 1;
            break;

        case 'bar':
            $x = 2;
            break;
    }

    // $x is potentially undefined here.
    echo $x;
}

In the above example, the variable $x is defined if you pass “foo” or “bar” as argument for $a. However, since the switch statement has no default case statement, if you pass any other value, the variable $x would be undefined.

Available Fixes

  1. Check for existence of the variable explicitly:

    function myFunction($a) {
        switch ($a) {
            case 'foo':
                $x = 1;
                break;
    
            case 'bar':
                $x = 2;
                break;
        }
    
        if (isset($x)) { // Make sure it's always set.
            echo $x;
        }
    }
    
  2. Define a default value for the variable:

    function myFunction($a) {
        $x = ''; // Set a default which gets overridden for certain paths.
        switch ($a) {
            case 'foo':
                $x = 1;
                break;
    
            case 'bar':
                $x = 2;
                break;
        }
    
        echo $x;
    }
    
  3. Add a value for the missing path:

    function myFunction($a) {
        switch ($a) {
            case 'foo':
                $x = 1;
                break;
    
            case 'bar':
                $x = 2;
                break;
    
            // We add support for the missing case.
            default:
                $x = '';
                break;
        }
    
        echo $x;
    }
    
Loading history...
446
}
447
448 View Code Duplication
function getAccessTokenByDeviceUid($deviceUid)
0 ignored issues
show
Documentation introduced by
The return type could not be reliably inferred; please add a @return annotation.

Our type inference engine in quite powerful, but sometimes the code does not provide enough clues to go by. In these cases we request you to add a @return annotation as described here.

Loading history...
Duplication introduced by
This function seems to be duplicated in 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...
449
{
450
	$db = new DatabaseConnect();
0 ignored issues
show
Comprehensibility introduced by
Avoid variables with short names like $db. Configured minimum length is 3.

Short variable names may make your code harder to understand. Variable names should be self-descriptive. This check looks for variable names who are shorter than a configured minimum.

Loading history...
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 5 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
451
	$result = $db->query("SELECT * FROM accounts WHERE device_uid='" . $deviceUid  . "'");
452
	
453
	$accessToken;
0 ignored issues
show
Bug introduced by
The variable $accessToken seems only to be defined at a later point. Did you maybe move this code here without moving the variable definition?

This error can happen if you refactor code and forget to move the variable initialization.

Let’s take a look at a simple example:

function someFunction() {
    $x = 5;
    echo $x;
}

The above code is perfectly fine. Now imagine that we re-order the statements:

function someFunction() {
    echo $x;
    $x = 5;
}

In that case, $x would be read before it is initialized. This was a very basic example, however the principle is the same for the found issue.

Loading history...
454
	
455
	if ($result->num_rows > 0)
456
	{
457
		// output data of each row
458
		while($row = $result->fetch_assoc())
459
		{
460
			$accessToken = $row['access_token'];
461
		}
462
	}
463
	else
464
	{
465
		echo "Error: 0 results";
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal Error: 0 results 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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...
466
	}
467
468
	return $accessToken;
0 ignored issues
show
Bug introduced by
The variable $accessToken does not seem to be defined for all execution paths leading up to this point.

If you define a variable conditionally, it can happen that it is not defined for all execution paths.

Let’s take a look at an example:

function myFunction($a) {
    switch ($a) {
        case 'foo':
            $x = 1;
            break;

        case 'bar':
            $x = 2;
            break;
    }

    // $x is potentially undefined here.
    echo $x;
}

In the above example, the variable $x is defined if you pass “foo” or “bar” as argument for $a. However, since the switch statement has no default case statement, if you pass any other value, the variable $x would be undefined.

Available Fixes

  1. Check for existence of the variable explicitly:

    function myFunction($a) {
        switch ($a) {
            case 'foo':
                $x = 1;
                break;
    
            case 'bar':
                $x = 2;
                break;
        }
    
        if (isset($x)) { // Make sure it's always set.
            echo $x;
        }
    }
    
  2. Define a default value for the variable:

    function myFunction($a) {
        $x = ''; // Set a default which gets overridden for certain paths.
        switch ($a) {
            case 'foo':
                $x = 1;
                break;
    
            case 'bar':
                $x = 2;
                break;
        }
    
        echo $x;
    }
    
  3. Add a value for the missing path:

    function myFunction($a) {
        switch ($a) {
            case 'foo':
                $x = 1;
                break;
    
            case 'bar':
                $x = 2;
                break;
    
            // We add support for the missing case.
            default:
                $x = '';
                break;
        }
    
        echo $x;
    }
    
Loading history...
469
}
470
471
472
function getKarma($accessToken)
0 ignored issues
show
Documentation introduced by
The return type could not be reliably inferred; please add a @return annotation.

Our type inference engine in quite powerful, but sometimes the code does not provide enough clues to go by. In these cases we request you to add a @return annotation as described here.

Loading history...
473
{
474
	$accountCreator = new GetKarma();
475
	$accountCreator->setAccessToken($accessToken);
476
	$data = $accountCreator->execute();
477
	
478
	return $data["karma"];
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal karma 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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...
479
}
480
481
function deviceUidHasVotedThisPostId($deviceUid, $postId)
482
{
483
	$db = new DatabaseConnect();
0 ignored issues
show
Comprehensibility introduced by
Avoid variables with short names like $db. Configured minimum length is 3.

Short variable names may make your code harder to understand. Variable names should be self-descriptive. This check looks for variable names who are shorter than a configured minimum.

Loading history...
484
485
	$postId = $db->real_escape_string($postId);
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
Consider using a different name than the parameter $postId. This often makes code more readable.
Loading history...
486
487
	$result = $db->query("SELECT id
488
						  FROM votes
489
						  WHERE (postId = '" . $postId . "' AND device_uid = '" . $deviceUid . "')");
490
	
491 View Code Duplication
	if($result === false)
0 ignored issues
show
Duplication introduced by
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...
492
	{
493
		$error = db_error();
494
		echo $error;
495
		echo "Adding Vote failed: (" . $result->errno . ") " . $result->error;
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal Adding Vote failed: ( 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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...
496
	}
497
498
	if($result->num_rows == 0)
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
The if-else statement can be simplified to return !($result->num_rows == 0);.
Loading history...
499
	{
500
	    return FALSE;
501
	}
502
	else
503
	{
504
	    return TRUE;
505
	}
506
}
507
508
function addVoteWithPostIdAndTypeToDeviceUid($postId, $voteType, $device_uid)
509
{
510
	$db = new DatabaseConnect();  
0 ignored issues
show
Comprehensibility introduced by
Avoid variables with short names like $db. Configured minimum length is 3.

Short variable names may make your code harder to understand. Variable names should be self-descriptive. This check looks for variable names who are shorter than a configured minimum.

Loading history...
511
512
	$postId = $db->real_escape_string($postId);
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 3 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
Coding Style introduced by
Consider using a different name than the parameter $postId. This often makes code more readable.
Loading history...
513
	$voteType = $db->real_escape_string($voteType);
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
Consider using a different name than the parameter $voteType. This often makes code more readable.
Loading history...
514
	
515
	if(deviceUidHasVotedThisPostId($device_uid, $postId))
516
	{
517
		return "Already voted";
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal Already voted 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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...
518
	}
519
520
	$result = $db->query("INSERT INTO votes (device_uid, postId, type)
521
					VALUES ('" . $device_uid . "','" . $postId . "','" . $voteType . "')");
522
	
523 View Code Duplication
	if($result === false){
0 ignored issues
show
Duplication introduced by
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...
524
			$error = db_error();
525
			echo $error;
526
			echo "Adding Vote failed: (" . $result->errno . ") " . $result->error;
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal Adding Vote failed: ( 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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...
527
	}		
528
}
529
530
function registerAccount(Location $location) {
531
	$accountCreator = new CreateUser();
532
	$accountCreator->setLocation($location);
533
	$data = $accountCreator->execute();
534
	
535
	$access_token = (string)$data[0]['access_token'];
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 4 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
536
	$refresh_token = (string)$data[0]['refresh_token'];
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 3 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
537
	$token_type = (string)$data[0]['token_type'];
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 6 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
538
	$expires_in = $data[0]['expires_in'];
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 6 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
539
	$expiration_date = $data[0]['expiration_date'];
540
	$distinct_id = (string)$data[0]['distinct_id'];
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 5 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
541
	$device_uid = (string)$data[1];
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 6 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
542
543
	$name = $location->cityName;
544
	$lat = $location->lat;
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 2 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
545
	$lng = $location->lng;
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 2 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
546
	
547
	$db = new DatabaseConnect();  
0 ignored issues
show
Comprehensibility introduced by
Avoid variables with short names like $db. Configured minimum length is 3.

Short variable names may make your code harder to understand. Variable names should be self-descriptive. This check looks for variable names who are shorter than a configured minimum.

Loading history...
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 5 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
548
	$result = $db->query("INSERT INTO accounts (access_token, refresh_token, token_type,
549
					expires_in, expiration_date, distinct_id, device_uid, name, lat, lng)
550
					VALUES ('" . $access_token . "','" . $refresh_token . "','" . $token_type .
551
					"','" .  $expires_in . "','" . $expiration_date . "','" . $distinct_id .
552
					"','" . $device_uid . "','" . $name . "','" . $lat . "','" . $lng . "') ");
553
554
	$success = TRUE;
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
$success is not used, you could remove the assignment.

This check looks for variable assignements that are either overwritten by other assignments or where the variable is not used subsequently.

$myVar = 'Value';
$higher = false;

if (rand(1, 6) > 3) {
    $higher = true;
} else {
    $higher = false;
}

Both the $myVar assignment in line 1 and the $higher assignment in line 2 are dead. The first because $myVar is never used and the second because $higher is always overwritten for every possible time line.

Loading history...
555 View Code Duplication
	if($result === false){
0 ignored issues
show
Duplication introduced by
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...
556
			$error = db_error();
557
			echo $error;
558
			echo "Adding account failed: (" . $result->errno . ") " . $result->error;
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal Adding account failed: ( 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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...
559
			$success = FALSE;
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
$success is not used, you could remove the assignment.

This check looks for variable assignements that are either overwritten by other assignments or where the variable is not used subsequently.

$myVar = 'Value';
$higher = false;

if (rand(1, 6) > 3) {
    $higher = true;
} else {
    $higher = false;
}

Both the $myVar assignment in line 1 and the $higher assignment in line 2 are dead. The first because $myVar is never used and the second because $higher is always overwritten for every possible time line.

Loading history...
560
	}	
561
	
562
	return $device_uid;
563
}
564
565
function getPosts($lastPostId, $accessToken, $url, $version = 'v2')
566
{	
567
	$accountCreator = new GetPosts();
568
	$accountCreator->setLastPostId($lastPostId);
569
	$accountCreator->setAccessToken($accessToken);
570
	$accountCreator->setUrl($url);
571
	$accountCreator->version = $version;
572
573
	$config = parse_ini_file('config/config.ini.php');
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 3 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
574
	$location = new Location();
575
	$location->setLat($config['default_lat']);
576
	$location->setLng($config['default_lng']);
577
	$location->setCityName($config['default_location']);
578
	$accountCreator->location = $location;
579
	$data = $accountCreator->execute();
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 21 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
580
	
581
	return $data;
582
}
583
584
function createAccount()
585
{
586
	$config = parse_ini_file('config/config.ini.php');
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 3 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
587
	$location = new Location();
588
	$location->setLat($config['default_lat']);
589
	$location->setLng($config['default_lng']);
590
	$location->setCityName($config['default_location']);
591
592
	$device_uid = registerAccount($location);
593
594
	return $device_uid;
595
}
596
597
function isUserBot()
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
isUserBot uses the super-global variable $_SERVER which is generally not recommended.

Instead of super-globals, we recommend to explicitly inject the dependencies of your class. This makes your code less dependent on global state and it becomes generally more testable:

// Bad
class Router
{
    public function generate($path)
    {
        return $_SERVER['HOST'].$path;
    }
}

// Better
class Router
{
    private $host;

    public function __construct($host)
    {
        $this->host = $host;
    }

    public function generate($path)
    {
        return $this->host.$path;
    }
}

class Controller
{
    public function myAction(Request $request)
    {
        // Instead of
        $page = isset($_GET['page']) ? intval($_GET['page']) : 1;

        // Better (assuming you use the Symfony2 request)
        $page = $request->query->get('page', 1);
    }
}
Loading history...
598
{
599
	preg_match('/bot|spider|google|twitter/i', $_SERVER['HTTP_USER_AGENT'], $matches);
600
601
    return (isset($matches[0])) ? true : false;
602
}
603
604
function botDeviceUidIsSet($config)
605
{
606
	if(!array_key_exists('botDeviceUid', $config) || !isset($config['botDeviceUid']) || $config['botDeviceUid'] == '' || $config['botDeviceUid'] == 'xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx')
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
The if-else statement can be simplified to return !(!array_key_exis...xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx');.
Loading history...
Coding Style introduced by
This line exceeds maximum limit of 120 characters; contains 187 characters

Overly long lines are hard to read on any screen. Most code styles therefor impose a maximum limit on the number of characters in a line.

Loading history...
607
	{
608
		return FALSE;
609
	}
610
	else
611
	{
612
		return TRUE;
613
	}
614
}
615
616
/**
617
 * Compute HTML Code
618
 */
619
620
/**
621
 * Gets the title.
622
 *
623
 * @return     string  The title.
624
 */
625
function getTitle($post, $view = 'time', $isDetailedView = FALSE)
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The parameter $view is not used and could be removed.

This check looks from parameters that have been defined for a function or method, but which are not used in the method body.

Loading history...
626
{
627
	$title = 'JodelBlue - Web-App and Browser-Client';
628
629
	if($isDetailedView)
630
	{
631
		$title = 'JodelBlue: ' . substr(htmlspecialchars($post['message']), 0, 44);
632
	}
633
634
	return $title;
635
}
636
637
/**
638
 * Gets the meta description.
639
 *
640
 * @return     string  The meta description.
641
 */
642
function getMetaDescription($post, $view = 'time', $isDetailedView = FALSE)
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code introduced by
The parameter $view is not used and could be removed.

This check looks from parameters that have been defined for a function or method, but which are not used in the method body.

Loading history...
643
{
644
	$description = 'JodelBlue is a Web-App and Browser-Client for the Jodel App. No registration required! Browse Jodels all over the world. Send your own Jodels or upvote others.';
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
This line exceeds maximum limit of 120 characters; contains 178 characters

Overly long lines are hard to read on any screen. Most code styles therefor impose a maximum limit on the number of characters in a line.

Loading history...
645
646
	if($isDetailedView)
647
	{
648
		$description = 'On JodelBlue with ' . htmlspecialchars($post['vote_count']) . ' Upvotes: ' . substr(htmlspecialchars($post['message']), 0, 140);
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
This line exceeds maximum limit of 120 characters; contains 146 characters

Overly long lines are hard to read on any screen. Most code styles therefor impose a maximum limit on the number of characters in a line.

Loading history...
649
	}
650
651
	return $description;
652
}
653
654
function jodelToHtml($post, $view = 'time', $isDetailedView = FALSE)
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
jodelToHtml uses the super-global variable $_GET which is generally not recommended.

Instead of super-globals, we recommend to explicitly inject the dependencies of your class. This makes your code less dependent on global state and it becomes generally more testable:

// Bad
class Router
{
    public function generate($path)
    {
        return $_SERVER['HOST'].$path;
    }
}

// Better
class Router
{
    private $host;

    public function __construct($host)
    {
        $this->host = $host;
    }

    public function generate($path)
    {
        return $this->host.$path;
    }
}

class Controller
{
    public function myAction(Request $request)
    {
        // Instead of
        $page = isset($_GET['page']) ? intval($_GET['page']) : 1;

        // Better (assuming you use the Symfony2 request)
        $page = $request->query->get('page', 1);
    }
}
Loading history...
655
{	//ToDO
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
Comment refers to a TODO task

This check looks TODO comments that have been left in the code.

``TODO``s show that something is left unfinished and should be attended to.

Loading history...
656
	//Replace # with link
657
	//preg_replace('~(\#)([^\s!,. /()"\'?]+)~', '<a href="tag/$2">#$2</a>', $text);
0 ignored issues
show
Unused Code Comprehensibility introduced by
44% 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...
658
659
	//Time to time difference
660
	$now = new DateTime();
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 6 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
661
	$d = new DateTime($post['created_at']);
0 ignored issues
show
Comprehensibility introduced by
Avoid variables with short names like $d. Configured minimum length is 3.

Short variable names may make your code harder to understand. Variable names should be self-descriptive. This check looks for variable names who are shorter than a configured minimum.

Loading history...
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 8 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
662
	$timediff = $now->diff($d);
663
664
	$timediff_inSeconds = (string)$timediff->format('%s');
665
	$timediff_inMinutes = (string)$timediff->format('%i');
666
	$timediff_inHours = (string)$timediff->format('%h');
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 3 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
667
	$timediff_inDays = (string)$timediff->format('%d');
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 4 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
668
	$timediff_inMonth = (string)$timediff->format('%m');
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
Equals sign not aligned with surrounding assignments; expected 3 spaces but found 1 space

This check looks for multiple assignments in successive lines of code. It will report an issue if the operators are not in a straight line.

To visualize

$a = "a";
$ab = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce issues in the first and second line, while this second example

$a   = "a";
$ab  = "ab";
$abc = "abc";

will produce no issues.

Loading history...
669
670
	if($timediff_inMonth!=0)
671
	{
672
			$timediff = $timediff_inMonth . "m";
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal m 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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...
673
	}
674
	else
675
	{
676
		if($timediff_inDays!=0)
677
		{
678
			$timediff = $timediff_inDays . "d";
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal d 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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...
679
		}
680
		else
681
		{
682
			if($timediff_inHours!=0)
683
			{
684
				$timediff = $timediff_inHours . "h";
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal h 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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...
685
			}
686
			else
687
			{
688
				if($timediff_inMinutes!=0)
689
				{
690
					$timediff = $timediff_inMinutes . "m";
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal m 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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...
691
				}
692
				else
693
				{
694
					$timediff = $timediff_inSeconds . "s";
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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...
695
				}
696
			}
697
		}
698
	}
699
700
701
	?>
702
	<article id ="postId-<?php echo $post['post_id']; ?>" class="jodel" style="background-color: #<?php echo $post['color'];?>;">
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
This line exceeds maximum limit of 120 characters; contains 126 characters

Overly long lines are hard to read on any screen. Most code styles therefor impose a maximum limit on the number of characters in a line.

Loading history...
703
		<content>
704
			<?php 
705
			if(isset($post['image_url']))
706
			{
707
			    $regexRest = '/[^\w$ .!?-]+/u';
708
709
				echo '<img src="' . $post['image_url'] . '" alt="' . htmlspecialchars(preg_replace($regexRest, '', $post['message'])) . '">';
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
This line exceeds maximum limit of 120 characters; contains 129 characters

Overly long lines are hard to read on any screen. Most code styles therefor impose a maximum limit on the number of characters in a line.

Loading history...
710
			}
711
			else {
712
				echo str_replace('  ', ' &nbsp;', nl2br(htmlspecialchars($post['message'])));
713
			}
714
			?>
715
		</content>
716
		<aside>
717
			<?php
718 View Code Duplication
				if($isDetailedView)
0 ignored issues
show
Duplication introduced by
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...
719
				{?>
720
					<a href="index.php?vote=up&getPostDetails=true&postID=<?php echo $post['post_id'];?>&postID_parent=<?php echo htmlspecialchars($_GET['postID']);?>" rel="nofollow">
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
This line exceeds maximum limit of 120 characters; contains 168 characters

Overly long lines are hard to read on any screen. Most code styles therefor impose a maximum limit on the number of characters in a line.

Loading history...
721
		  <?php }
722
				else
723
				{?>
724
					<a href="index.php?vote=up&postID=<?php echo $post['post_id'];?>" rel="nofollow">
725
		  <?php } ?>
726
						<i class="fa fa-angle-up fa-3x"></i>
727
					</a>	
728
						<br />
729
					<?php echo $post["vote_count"];?><br />
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal vote_count 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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...
730
			<?php
731 View Code Duplication
				if($isDetailedView)
0 ignored issues
show
Duplication introduced by
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...
732
				{?>
733
					<a href="index.php?vote=down&getPostDetails=true&postID=<?php echo $post['post_id'];?>&postID_parent=<?php echo htmlspecialchars($_GET['postID']);?>" rel="nofollow">
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
This line exceeds maximum limit of 120 characters; contains 170 characters

Overly long lines are hard to read on any screen. Most code styles therefor impose a maximum limit on the number of characters in a line.

Loading history...
734
		  <?php }
735
				else
736
				{?>
737
					<a href="index.php?vote=down&postID=<?php echo $post['post_id'];?>" rel="nofollow">
738
		  <?php } ?>
739
						<i class="fa fa-angle-down fa-3x"></i>
740
					</a>
741
		</aside>
742
743
		<footer>
744
			<table>
745
				<tr>
746
					<td class="time">
747
						<span class="tip" data-tooltip="Time">
748
							<i class="fa fa-clock-o"></i>
749
							<?php echo $timediff;?>
750
							<span class="tiptext"><?php echo $d->format('Y-m-d H:i:s');?></span>
751
						</span> 
752
					</td>
753
					<td class="comments">
754
						<?php if(!$isDetailedView) {?>
755
						<span data-tooltip="Comments">
756
							<a href="index.php?getPostDetails=true&view=<?php echo $view;?>&postID=<?php echo $post["post_id"];?>">
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal post_id 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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...
757
								<i class="fa fa-commenting-o"></i>
758
								<?php if(array_key_exists("child_count", $post)) {
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal child_count 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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...
759
											echo $post["child_count"];
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal child_count 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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...
760
										} else echo "0";
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal 0 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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...
761
								?>
762
								</a>
763
						</span>
764
						<?php } ?>
765
					</td>
766
					<td class="distance">
767
						<?php
768
							if($isDetailedView)
769
							{
770
								if(isset($post["parent_creator"]) && $post["parent_creator"] == 1)
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal parent_creator 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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...
771
								{
772
									?>
773
									<span data-tooltip="Author">
774
										<i class="fa fa-user-o"></i> OJ |
775
									</span>
776
									<?php 
777
						  		}
778
						  		else
779
						  		{
780
						  			//Is not parent Jodel in detailed View
781
									if(!array_key_exists('child_count', $post) && array_key_exists('parent_creator', $post))
782
									{
783
							  			?>
784
							  			<span data-tooltip="Author">
785
											<i class="fa fa-user-o"></i> #<?php echo $post["user_handle"];?> |
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style Comprehensibility introduced by
The string literal user_handle 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 'literal' or with double quotes "literal". The difference between these is that string literals in double quotes may contain variables with are evaluated at run-time as well as escape sequences.

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 (\') and the backslash (\\). Every other character is displayed as is.

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: Single is Value

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...
786
										</span>
787
										<?php
788
									}
789
						  		}
790
						  	}
791
					  		?>
792
793
						<span class="tip" data-tooltip="Distance">
794
							<i class="fa fa-map-marker"></i>
795
							<?php echo $post['distance'];?> km
796
							<span class="tiptext"><?php echo $post['location']['name'];?></span>
797
						</span>
798
					</td>
799
				</tr>
800
			</table>
801
		</footer>
802
	</article>
803
<?php
804
}
0 ignored issues
show
Coding Style introduced by
As per coding style, files should not end with a newline character.

This check marks files that end in a newline character, i.e. an empy line.

Loading history...
805