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1 | <?php |
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2 | |||
3 | namespace Postpay\Tests\Http; |
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4 | |||
5 | use PHPUnit\Framework\TestCase; |
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6 | use Postpay\Http\Request; |
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7 | use Postpay\Http\Response; |
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8 | use Postpay\Exceptions\RESTfulException; |
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9 | |||
10 | class ResponseTest extends TestCase |
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11 | { |
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12 | public function setUp() |
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13 | { |
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14 | $this->request = new Request('GET'); |
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15 | } |
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16 | |||
17 | public function testGetRequest() |
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18 | { |
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19 | $response = new Response($this->request); |
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20 | |||
21 | self::assertEquals($this->request, $response->getRequest()); |
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22 | } |
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23 | |||
24 | public function testGetStatusCode() |
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25 | { |
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26 | $response = new Response($this->request, 200); |
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27 | self::assertSame(200, $response->getStatusCode()); |
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28 | } |
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29 | |||
30 | public function testGetHeaders() |
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31 | { |
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32 | $headers = ['test' => true]; |
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33 | $response = new Response($this->request, 200, $headers); |
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34 | |||
35 | self::assertEquals($headers, $response->getHeaders()); |
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36 | } |
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37 | |||
38 | public function testJson() |
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39 | { |
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40 | $json = ['test' => true]; |
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41 | $response = new Response($this->request, 200, [], json_encode($json)); |
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42 | |||
43 | self::assertEquals($json, $response->json()); |
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44 | } |
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45 | |||
46 | public function testIsError() |
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47 | { |
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48 | $body = json_encode([RESTfulException::ERROR_KEY => true]); |
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49 | $response = new Response($this->request, 400, [], $body); |
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50 | |||
51 | self::assertTrue($response->isError()); |
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52 | |||
53 | self::assertInstanceOf( |
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54 | RESTfulException::class, |
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55 | $response->getThrownException() |
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56 | ); |
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57 | } |
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58 | |||
59 | public function testDecodeNonJson() |
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60 | { |
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61 | $response = new Response($this->request, 200, [], '-'); |
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62 | |||
63 | self::assertEmpty($response->json()); |
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64 | } |
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65 | } |
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66 |
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: