Conditions | 12 |
Paths | 20 |
Total Lines | 69 |
Code Lines | 50 |
Lines | 0 |
Ratio | 0 % |
Changes | 0 |
Small methods make your code easier to understand, in particular if combined with a good name. Besides, if your method is small, finding a good name is usually much easier.
For example, if you find yourself adding comments to a method's body, this is usually a good sign to extract the commented part to a new method, and use the comment as a starting point when coming up with a good name for this new method.
Commonly applied refactorings include:
If many parameters/temporary variables are present:
1 | <?php |
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29 | public function index($name, $value = null) |
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30 | { |
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31 | $records = null; |
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32 | // set current page and offset |
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33 | $page = (int)$this->request->query->get('page', 0); |
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34 | $cfgs = $this->application->configs; |
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35 | $userPerPage = (int)$cfgs['usersOnPage']; |
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36 | if ($userPerPage < 1) { |
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37 | $userPerPage = 1; |
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38 | } |
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39 | $offset = $page * $userPerPage; |
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40 | |||
41 | switch ($name) { |
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42 | case 'rating': // rating list, order by rating DESC |
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43 | // check if rating is enabled |
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44 | if ((int)$cfgs['rating'] !== 1) { |
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45 | throw new NotFoundException(); |
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46 | } |
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47 | $records = (new ProfileRecords())->orderBy('rating', 'DESC'); |
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48 | break; |
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49 | case 'hobby': // search by hobby |
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50 | if (Str::likeEmpty($value)) { |
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51 | throw new NotFoundException(); |
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52 | } |
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53 | $records = (new ProfileRecords())->where('hobby', 'like', '%' . $value . '%'); |
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54 | break; |
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55 | case 'city': |
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56 | if (Str::likeEmpty($value)) { |
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57 | throw new NotFoundException(); |
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58 | } |
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59 | $records = (new ProfileRecords())->where('city', $value); |
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60 | break; |
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61 | case 'born': |
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62 | if ($value === null || !Any::isInt($value)) { |
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63 | throw new NotFoundException(); |
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64 | } |
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65 | $records = (new ProfileRecords())->where('birthday', 'like', $value . '-%'); |
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66 | break; |
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67 | case 'all': |
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68 | $records = (new ProfileRecords())->orderBy('id', 'DESC'); |
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69 | break; |
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70 | default: |
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71 | $this->response->redirect('profile/index/all'); |
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72 | break; |
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73 | } |
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74 | |||
75 | // build pagination |
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76 | $pagination = new SimplePagination([ |
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77 | 'url' => ['profile/index', $name, $value], |
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78 | 'page' => $page, |
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79 | 'step' => $userPerPage, |
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80 | 'total' => $records->count() |
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81 | ]); |
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82 | |||
83 | // get profile list with relation for user and role tables in 1 query |
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84 | $profiles = $records->with(['user', 'user.role']) |
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85 | ->skip($offset) |
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86 | ->take($userPerPage) |
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87 | ->get(); |
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88 | |||
89 | // render output view |
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90 | return $this->view->render('index', [ |
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91 | 'records' => $profiles, |
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92 | 'pagination' => $pagination, |
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93 | 'id' => $name, |
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94 | 'add' => $value, |
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95 | 'ratingOn' => (int)$cfgs['rating'] |
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96 | ]); |
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97 | } |
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98 | } |
In PHP it is possible to write to properties without declaring them. For example, the following is perfectly valid PHP code:
Generally, it is a good practice to explictly declare properties to avoid accidental typos and provide IDE auto-completion: