The return type TimestampableEntity is a trait, and thus cannot be used for type-hinting in PHP. Maybe consider adding an interface and use that for type-hinting?
In PHP traits cannot be used for type-hinting as they do not define a well-defined
structure. This is because any class that uses a trait can rename that trait’s methods.
If you would like to return an object that has a guaranteed set of methods, you
could create a companion interface that lists these methods explicitly.
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public function setCreatedAt(\DateTime $createdAt)
The return type TimestampableEntity is a trait, and thus cannot be used for type-hinting in PHP. Maybe consider adding an interface and use that for type-hinting?
In PHP traits cannot be used for type-hinting as they do not define a well-defined
structure. This is because any class that uses a trait can rename that trait’s methods.
If you would like to return an object that has a guaranteed set of methods, you
could create a companion interface that lists these methods explicitly.
Loading history...
61
*/
62
public function setUpdatedAt(\DateTime $updatedAt)
In PHP traits cannot be used for type-hinting as they do not define a well-defined structure. This is because any class that uses a trait can rename that trait’s methods.
If you would like to return an object that has a guaranteed set of methods, you could create a companion interface that lists these methods explicitly.