You have injected the Request via parameter $request. This is generally not recommended as there might be multiple instances during a request cycle (f.e. when using sub-requests). Instead, it is recommended to inject the RequestStack and retrieve the current request each time you need it via getCurrentRequest().
$request is of type object<Illuminate\Http\Request>, but the property $request was declared to be of type object<App\Http\Requests\Request>. Are you sure that you always receive this specific sub-class here, or does it make sense to add an instanceof check?
Our type inference engine has found a suspicous assignment of a value to a property.
This check raises an issue when a value that can be of a given class or a super-class
is assigned to a property that is type hinted more strictly.
Either this assignment is in error or an instanceof check should be added for that assignment.
The property vendor does not exist on object<App\Lot>. Since you implemented __get, maybe consider adding a @property annotation.
Since your code implements the magic getter _get, this function will be called for any read access on an
undefined variable. You can add the @property annotation to your class or interface to document
the existence of this variable.
<?php/** * @property int $x * @property int $y * @property string $text */classMyLabel{private$properties;private$allowedProperties=array('x','y','text');publicfunction__get($name){if(isset($properties[$name])&&in_array($name,$this->allowedProperties)){return$properties[$name];}else{returnnull;}}publicfunction__set($name,$value){if(in_array($name,$this->allowedProperties)){$properties[$name]=$value;}else{thrownew\LogicException("Property $name is not defined.");}}}
If the property has read access only, you can use the @property-read annotation instead.
Of course, you may also just have mistyped another name, in which case you should fix the error.