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<?php |
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namespace Thunder\Serializard\Tests; |
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use Thunder\Serializard\Normalizer\CallbackNormalizer; |
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use Thunder\Serializard\Normalizer\ClosureBindNormalizer; |
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use Thunder\Serializard\Normalizer\GetObjectVarsNormalizer; |
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use Thunder\Serializard\Normalizer\ReflectionNormalizer; |
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use Thunder\Serializard\Tests\Fake\Inheritance\FakeClass; |
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use Thunder\Serializard\Tests\Fake\FakeTag; |
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use Thunder\Serializard\Tests\Fake\FakeUser; |
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use Thunder\Serializard\Tests\Fake\PropertyVisibility; |
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/** |
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* @author Tomasz Kowalczyk <[email protected]> |
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*/ |
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final class NormalizerTest extends AbstractTestCase |
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{ |
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public function testReflectionSkip() |
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{ |
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$normalizer = new ReflectionNormalizer(['tag', 'tags']); |
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$object = new FakeUser(12, 'XXX', new FakeTag(144, 'YYY')); |
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$this->assertSame(['id' => 12, 'name' => 'XXX'], $normalizer($object)); |
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} |
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public function testReflectionInheritance() |
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{ |
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$normalizer = new ReflectionNormalizer(); |
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$this->assertSame([ |
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'property' => 'property', |
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'parentProperty' => 'parent', |
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'parentParentProperty' => 'parentParent', |
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], $normalizer(new FakeClass('parentParent', 'parent', 'property'))); |
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} |
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public function testGetObjectVarsNormalizer() |
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{ |
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$normalizer = new GetObjectVarsNormalizer(); |
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$this->assertSame(['public' => 'public'], $normalizer(new PropertyVisibility())); |
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} |
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public function testCallbackNormalizer() |
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{ |
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$normalizer = new CallbackNormalizer(function(PropertyVisibility $pv) { |
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return ['public' => $pv->public]; |
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}); |
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$this->assertSame(['public' => 'public'], $normalizer(new PropertyVisibility())); |
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} |
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public function testClosureBindNormalizer() |
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{ |
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$normalizer = new ClosureBindNormalizer(function() { |
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return [ |
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'id' => $this->id, |
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'name' => $this->name, |
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'tag' => $this->tag, |
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]; |
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}); |
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$this->assertEquals([ |
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'id' => 1, |
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'name' => 'user', |
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'tag' => new FakeTag(2, 'tag'), |
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], $normalizer(new FakeUser(1, 'user', new FakeTag(2, 'tag')))); |
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} |
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} |
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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: