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1 | <?php |
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2 | |||
3 | namespace Spatie\ModelStatus; |
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4 | |||
5 | use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Builder; |
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6 | use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Relations\MorphMany; |
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7 | use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Relations\Relation; |
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8 | use Illuminate\Database\Query\Builder as QueryBuilder; |
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9 | use Illuminate\Support\Arr; |
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10 | use Illuminate\Support\Facades\DB; |
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11 | use Spatie\ModelStatus\Events\StatusUpdated; |
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12 | use Spatie\ModelStatus\Exceptions\InvalidStatus; |
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13 | |||
14 | trait HasStatuses |
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15 | { |
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16 | public function statuses(): MorphMany |
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17 | { |
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18 | return $this->morphMany($this->getStatusModelClassName(), 'model', 'model_type', $this->getModelKeyColumnName()) |
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19 | ->latest('id'); |
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20 | } |
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21 | |||
22 | public function status(): ?Status |
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23 | { |
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24 | return $this->latestStatus(); |
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25 | } |
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26 | |||
27 | public function setStatus(string $name, ?string $reason = null): self |
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28 | { |
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29 | if (! $this->isValidStatus($name, $reason)) { |
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30 | throw InvalidStatus::create($name); |
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31 | } |
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32 | |||
33 | return $this->forceSetStatus($name, $reason); |
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34 | } |
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35 | |||
36 | public function isValidStatus(string $name, ?string $reason = null): bool |
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37 | { |
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38 | return true; |
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39 | } |
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40 | |||
41 | /** |
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42 | * @param string|array $names |
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43 | * |
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44 | * @return null|Status |
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45 | */ |
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46 | public function latestStatus(...$names): ?Status |
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47 | { |
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48 | $statuses = $this->relationLoaded('statuses') ? $this->statuses : $this->statuses(); |
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0 ignored issues
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show
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49 | |||
50 | $names = is_array($names) ? Arr::flatten($names) : func_get_args(); |
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51 | if (count($names) < 1) { |
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52 | return $statuses->first(); |
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53 | } |
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54 | |||
55 | return $statuses->whereIn('name', $names)->first(); |
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56 | } |
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57 | |||
58 | public function hasEverHadStatus($name): bool |
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59 | { |
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60 | $statuses = $this->relationLoaded('statuses') ? $this->statuses : $this->statuses(); |
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0 ignored issues
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show
It seems like
relationLoaded() must be provided by classes using this trait. How about adding it as abstract method to this trait?
This check looks for methods that are used by a trait but not required by it. To illustrate, let’s look at the following code example trait Idable {
public function equalIds(Idable $other) {
return $this->getId() === $other->getId();
}
}
The trait Adding the ![]() |
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61 | |||
62 | return $statuses->where('name', $name)->count() > 0; |
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63 | } |
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64 | |||
65 | public function deleteStatus(...$names) |
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66 | { |
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67 | $names = is_array($names) ? Arr::flatten($names) : func_get_args(); |
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68 | if (count($names) < 1) { |
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69 | return $this; |
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70 | } |
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71 | |||
72 | $this->statuses()->whereIn('name', $names)->delete(); |
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73 | } |
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74 | |||
75 | public function scopeCurrentStatus(Builder $builder, ...$names) |
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76 | { |
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77 | $names = is_array($names) ? Arr::flatten($names) : func_get_args(); |
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78 | $builder |
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79 | ->whereHas( |
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80 | 'statuses', |
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81 | function (Builder $query) use ($names) { |
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82 | $query |
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83 | ->whereIn('name', $names) |
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84 | ->whereIn( |
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85 | 'id', |
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86 | function (QueryBuilder $query) { |
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87 | $query |
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88 | ->select(DB::raw('max(id)')) |
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89 | ->from($this->getStatusTableName()) |
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90 | ->where('model_type', $this->getStatusModelType()) |
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91 | ->whereColumn($this->getModelKeyColumnName(), $this->getQualifiedKeyName()); |
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0 ignored issues
–
show
It seems like
getQualifiedKeyName() must be provided by classes using this trait. How about adding it as abstract method to this trait?
This check looks for methods that are used by a trait but not required by it. To illustrate, let’s look at the following code example trait Idable {
public function equalIds(Idable $other) {
return $this->getId() === $other->getId();
}
}
The trait Adding the ![]() |
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92 | } |
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93 | ); |
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94 | } |
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95 | ); |
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96 | } |
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97 | |||
98 | /** |
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99 | * @param string|array $names |
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100 | * |
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101 | * @return void |
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102 | **/ |
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103 | public function scopeOtherCurrentStatus(Builder $builder, ...$names) |
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104 | { |
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105 | $names = is_array($names) ? Arr::flatten($names) : func_get_args(); |
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106 | $builder |
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107 | ->whereHas( |
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108 | 'statuses', |
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109 | function (Builder $query) use ($names) { |
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110 | $query |
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111 | ->whereNotIn('name', $names) |
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112 | ->whereIn( |
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113 | 'id', |
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114 | function (QueryBuilder $query) use ($names) { |
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115 | $query |
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116 | ->select(DB::raw('max(id)')) |
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117 | ->from($this->getStatusTableName()) |
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118 | ->where('model_type', $this->getStatusModelType()) |
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119 | ->whereColumn($this->getModelKeyColumnName(), $this->getQualifiedKeyName()); |
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0 ignored issues
–
show
It seems like
getQualifiedKeyName() must be provided by classes using this trait. How about adding it as abstract method to this trait?
This check looks for methods that are used by a trait but not required by it. To illustrate, let’s look at the following code example trait Idable {
public function equalIds(Idable $other) {
return $this->getId() === $other->getId();
}
}
The trait Adding the ![]() |
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120 | } |
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121 | ); |
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122 | } |
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123 | ) |
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124 | ->orWhereDoesntHave('statuses'); |
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125 | } |
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126 | |||
127 | public function getStatusAttribute(): string |
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128 | { |
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129 | return (string) $this->latestStatus(); |
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130 | } |
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131 | |||
132 | public function forceSetStatus(string $name, ?string $reason = null): self |
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133 | { |
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134 | $oldStatus = $this->latestStatus(); |
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135 | |||
136 | $newStatus = $this->statuses()->create([ |
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137 | 'name' => $name, |
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138 | 'reason' => $reason, |
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139 | ]); |
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140 | |||
141 | event(new StatusUpdated($oldStatus, $newStatus, $this)); |
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142 | |||
143 | return $this; |
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144 | } |
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145 | |||
146 | protected function getStatusTableName(): string |
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147 | { |
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148 | $modelClass = $this->getStatusModelClassName(); |
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149 | |||
150 | return (new $modelClass)->getTable(); |
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151 | } |
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152 | |||
153 | protected function getModelKeyColumnName(): string |
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154 | { |
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155 | return config('model-status.model_primary_key_attribute') ?? 'model_id'; |
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156 | } |
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157 | |||
158 | protected function getStatusModelClassName(): string |
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159 | { |
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160 | return config('model-status.status_model'); |
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161 | } |
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162 | |||
163 | protected function getStatusModelType(): string |
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164 | { |
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165 | return array_search(static::class, Relation::morphMap()) ?: static::class; |
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166 | } |
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167 | } |
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168 |
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: