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The return type of return $this; (Gandung\Promise\RejectedPromise) is incompatible with the return type declared by the interface Gandung\Promise\PromiseInterface::then of type Gandung\Promise\Promise.
If you return a value from a function or method, it should be a sub-type of the
type that is given by the parent type f.e. an interface, or abstract method.
This is more formally defined by the
Lizkov substitution principle,
and guarantees that classes that depend on the parent type can use any instance
of a child type interchangably. This principle also belongs to the
SOLID principles
for object oriented design.
Our function my_function expects a Post object, and outputs the author
of the post. The base class Post returns a simple string and outputting a
simple string will work just fine. However, the child class BlogPost which
is a sub-type of Post instead decided to return an object, and is
therefore violating the SOLID principles. If a BlogPost were passed to
my_function, PHP would not complain, but ultimately fail when executing the
strtoupper call in its body.
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36
}
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$q = new Promise();
39
$reason = $this->reason;
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41
Context\ContextStack::create()->store(static function () use ($q, $reason, $onRejected) {
The class Throwable does not exist. Did you forget a USE statement, or did you not list all dependencies?
Scrutinizer analyzes your composer.json/composer.lock file if available to
determine the classes, and functions that are defined by your dependencies.
It seems like the listed class was neither found in your dependencies, nor was it
found in the analyzed files in your repository. If you are using some other form
of dependency management, you might want to disable this analysis.
If you return a value from a function or method, it should be a sub-type of the type that is given by the parent type f.e. an interface, or abstract method. This is more formally defined by the Lizkov substitution principle, and guarantees that classes that depend on the parent type can use any instance of a child type interchangably. This principle also belongs to the SOLID principles for object oriented design.
Let’s take a look at an example:
Our function
my_functionexpects aPostobject, and outputs the author of the post. The base classPostreturns a simple string and outputting a simple string will work just fine. However, the child classBlogPostwhich is a sub-type ofPostinstead decided to return anobject, and is therefore violating the SOLID principles. If aBlogPostwere passed tomy_function, PHP would not complain, but ultimately fail when executing thestrtouppercall in its body.