Conditions | 1 |
Paths | 1 |
Total Lines | 15 |
Code Lines | 8 |
Lines | 15 |
Ratio | 100 % |
Changes | 0 |
1 | <?php |
||
69 | public function testCheckIfValueIsOfRightObjectType() |
||
70 | { |
||
71 | $rule = Rule::fromArray( |
||
72 | $ruleConfiguration = [ |
||
73 | Rule::TYPE_OBJECT => [ |
||
74 | '\DateTime', |
||
75 | ] |
||
76 | ] |
||
77 | ); |
||
78 | |||
79 | $this->assertSame(true, $rule->is(Rule::TYPE_OBJECT)); |
||
80 | $this->assertSame(false, $rule->isNot(Rule::TYPE_OBJECT)); |
||
81 | $this->assertSame(['\DateTime'], $rule->getExpectedType()); |
||
82 | } |
||
83 | } |
||
84 |
This check looks for variable assignements that are either overwritten by other assignments or where the variable is not used subsequently.
Both the
$myVar
assignment in line 1 and the$higher
assignment in line 2 are dead. The first because$myVar
is never used and the second because$higher
is always overwritten for every possible time line.