| Conditions | 1 |
| Paths | 1 |
| Total Lines | 14 |
| Lines | 0 |
| Ratio | 0 % |
| Changes | 0 | ||
| 1 | <?php |
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| 18 | public function testQuery() |
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| 19 | { |
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| 20 | $modelClass = new Admin(); |
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| 21 | $query = new AdminQuery($modelClass); |
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| 22 | $query->init(); |
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| 23 | $query->canLogin(); |
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| 24 | $query->email("[email protected]"); |
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| 25 | $query->username("lianluo"); |
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| 26 | $this->assertTrue($query->count() > 0); |
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| 27 | $query->passwordResetToken("_" . time()); |
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| 28 | $query->emailConfirmationToken("222_0"); |
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| 29 | |||
| 30 | $this->assertFalse($query->count() > 0); |
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| 31 | } |
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| 32 | } |
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| 33 |
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: