| 1 | <?php  | 
            ||
| 19 | class InTheFuture extends AbstractDateTimeComparator { | 
            ||
| 20 | |||
| 21 | /**  | 
            ||
| 22 | * Holds the amount of parameters.  | 
            ||
| 23 | */  | 
            ||
| 24 | protected $amountOfParameters = 0;  | 
            ||
| 25 | |||
| 26 | /**  | 
            ||
| 27 | * Holds whether to parse the parameters as \DateTimes so the child class  | 
            ||
| 28 | * can decide.  | 
            ||
| 29 | */  | 
            ||
| 30 | protected $parseParametersAsDateTimes = false;  | 
            ||
| 
                                                                                                    
                        
                         | 
                |||
| 31 | |||
| 32 | /**  | 
            ||
| 33 | * Holds the type of the validator.  | 
            ||
| 34 | */  | 
            ||
| 35 | protected $type = 'inTheFuture';  | 
            ||
| 36 | |||
| 37 | /**  | 
            ||
| 38 |      * {@inheritdoc} | 
            ||
| 39 | */  | 
            ||
| 40 |     protected function isValidComparison(\DateTime $date, array $datetimes, array $parameters) { | 
            ||
| 44 | |||
| 45 | }  | 
            ||
| 46 | 
Very long variable names usually make code harder to read. It is therefore recommended not to make variable names too verbose.