Conditions | 4 |
Paths | 4 |
Total Lines | 20 |
Code Lines | 8 |
Lines | 0 |
Ratio | 0 % |
Changes | 0 |
1 | <?php namespace nyx\notify\transports; |
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38 | public function send(interfaces\Notifiable $notifiable, interfaces\Notification $notification) |
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39 | { |
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40 | /* @var mail\interfaces\Mailable $notification */ |
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41 | if (!$this->supports($notification)) { |
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42 | throw new \InvalidArgumentException('The given Notification is not supported (did you forget to implement the Mailable Interface?).'); |
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43 | } |
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44 | |||
45 | if (false === $notifiable->routeNotification('mail', $message = $notification->toMail($notifiable))) { |
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46 | return; |
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47 | } |
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48 | |||
49 | // The Notification might have built a subject during the toMail() call, but that's optional. |
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50 | // If no subject is available, we are going to use the humanized name of the Notification's class. |
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51 | if (empty($message->getSubject())) { |
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52 | $message->setSubject(utils\str\Cases::title(utils\str\Cases::delimit(class_basename($notification), ' '))); |
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53 | } |
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54 | |||
55 | // And finally - just send the message. |
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56 | $this->mailer->send($message); |
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57 | } |
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58 | |||
67 |
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: