for testing and deploying your application
for finding and fixing issues
for empowering human code reviews
<?php
/*
* This file is part of the Sylius package.
*
* (c) Paweł Jędrzejewski
* For the full copyright and license information, please view the LICENSE
* file that was distributed with this source code.
*/
namespace Sylius\Bundle\FixturesBundle\Loader;
use Sylius\Bundle\FixturesBundle\Fixture\FixtureInterface;
use Sylius\Bundle\FixturesBundle\Suite\SuiteInterface;
/**
* @author Kamil Kokot <[email protected]>
final class SuiteLoader implements SuiteLoaderInterface
{
* @var FixtureLoaderInterface
private $fixtureLoader;
* @param FixtureLoaderInterface $fixtureLoader
public function __construct(FixtureLoaderInterface $fixtureLoader)
$this->fixtureLoader = $fixtureLoader;
}
* {@inheritdoc}
public function load(SuiteInterface $suite)
* @var FixtureInterface $fixture
* @var array $fixtureOptions
foreach ($suite->getFixtures() as $fixture => $fixtureOptions) {
$this->fixtureLoader->load($suite, $fixture, $fixtureOptions);
$fixture
integer|string
object<Sylius\Bundle\Fix...xture\FixtureInterface>
It seems like the type of the argument is not accepted by the function/method which you are calling.
In some cases, in particular if PHP’s automatic type-juggling kicks in this might be fine. In other cases, however this might be a bug.
We suggest to add an explicit type cast like in the following example:
function acceptsInteger($int) { } $x = '123'; // string "123" // Instead of acceptsInteger($x); // we recommend to use acceptsInteger((integer) $x);
It seems like the type of the argument is not accepted by the function/method which you are calling.
In some cases, in particular if PHP’s automatic type-juggling kicks in this might be fine. In other cases, however this might be a bug.
We suggest to add an explicit type cast like in the following example: