These results are based on our legacy PHP analysis, consider migrating to our new PHP analysis engine instead. Learn more
1 | <?php |
||
2 | |||
3 | namespace Spatie\GoogleCalendar; |
||
4 | |||
5 | use Google_Client; |
||
6 | use Google_Service_Calendar; |
||
7 | |||
8 | class GoogleCalendarFactory |
||
9 | { |
||
10 | public static function createForCalendarId($calendarId) : GoogleCalendar |
||
11 | { |
||
12 | $config = config('laravel-google-calendar'); |
||
13 | |||
14 | $client = new Google_Client(); |
||
15 | |||
16 | $credentials = $client->loadServiceAccountJson($config['client_secret_json'], 'https://www.googleapis.com/auth/calendar'); |
||
0 ignored issues
–
show
|
|||
17 | |||
18 | $client->setAssertionCredentials($credentials); |
||
19 | |||
20 | $service = new Google_Service_Calendar($client); |
||
21 | |||
22 | return new GoogleCalendar($service, $calendarId); |
||
23 | } |
||
24 | } |
||
25 |
It seems like the type of the argument is not accepted by the function/method which you are calling.
In some cases, in particular if PHP’s automatic type-juggling kicks in this might be fine. In other cases, however this might be a bug.
We suggest to add an explicit type cast like in the following example: