eveseat/notifications

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src/Http/Controllers/GroupsController.php

Summary

Maintainability
A
1 hr
Test Coverage

Function postAddAffiliation has a Cognitive Complexity of 12 (exceeds 5 allowed). Consider refactoring.
Open

    public function postAddAffiliation(GroupAffiliation $request)
    {

        $group = NotificationGroup::findOrFail($request->input('id'));

Severity: Minor
Found in src/Http/Controllers/GroupsController.php - About 1 hr to fix

Cognitive Complexity

Cognitive Complexity is a measure of how difficult a unit of code is to intuitively understand. Unlike Cyclomatic Complexity, which determines how difficult your code will be to test, Cognitive Complexity tells you how difficult your code will be to read and comprehend.

A method's cognitive complexity is based on a few simple rules:

  • Code is not considered more complex when it uses shorthand that the language provides for collapsing multiple statements into one
  • Code is considered more complex for each "break in the linear flow of the code"
  • Code is considered more complex when "flow breaking structures are nested"

Further reading

The class GroupsController has a coupling between objects value of 16. Consider to reduce the number of dependencies under 13.
Open

class GroupsController extends Controller
{
    /**
     * @param  \Seat\Notifications\Http\DataTables\NotificationGroupDataTable  $data_table
     * @return \Illuminate\Contracts\View\Factory|\Illuminate\View\View

CouplingBetweenObjects

Since: 1.1.0

A class with too many dependencies has negative impacts on several quality aspects of a class. This includes quality criteria like stability, maintainability and understandability

Example

class Foo {
    /**
     * @var \foo\bar\X
     */
    private $x = null;

    /**
     * @var \foo\bar\Y
     */
    private $y = null;

    /**
     * @var \foo\bar\Z
     */
    private $z = null;

    public function setFoo(\Foo $foo) {}
    public function setBar(\Bar $bar) {}
    public function setBaz(\Baz $baz) {}

    /**
     * @return \SplObjectStorage
     * @throws \OutOfRangeException
     * @throws \InvalidArgumentException
     * @throws \ErrorException
     */
    public function process(\Iterator $it) {}

    // ...
}

Source https://phpmd.org/rules/design.html#couplingbetweenobjects

Avoid using static access to class '\Seat\Notifications\Models\NotificationGroup' in method 'store'.
Open

        NotificationGroup::create([
            'name' => $request->input('name'),
        ]);

StaticAccess

Since: 1.4.0

Static access causes unexchangeable dependencies to other classes and leads to hard to test code. Avoid using static access at all costs and instead inject dependencies through the constructor. The only case when static access is acceptable is when used for factory methods.

Example

class Foo
{
    public function bar()
    {
        Bar::baz();
    }
}

Source https://phpmd.org/rules/cleancode.html#staticaccess

Avoid using static access to class '\Seat\Notifications\Models\Integration' in method 'getEditGroup'.
Open

        $integrations = Integration::all();

StaticAccess

Since: 1.4.0

Static access causes unexchangeable dependencies to other classes and leads to hard to test code. Avoid using static access at all costs and instead inject dependencies through the constructor. The only case when static access is acceptable is when used for factory methods.

Example

class Foo
{
    public function bar()
    {
        Bar::baz();
    }
}

Source https://phpmd.org/rules/cleancode.html#staticaccess

Avoid using static access to class '\Seat\Notifications\Models\Integration' in method 'postAddIntegrations'.
Open

            $integration = Integration::find($integration_id);

StaticAccess

Since: 1.4.0

Static access causes unexchangeable dependencies to other classes and leads to hard to test code. Avoid using static access at all costs and instead inject dependencies through the constructor. The only case when static access is acceptable is when used for factory methods.

Example

class Foo
{
    public function bar()
    {
        Bar::baz();
    }
}

Source https://phpmd.org/rules/cleancode.html#staticaccess

Avoid using static access to class '\Seat\Notifications\Models\NotificationGroup' in method 'postAddAllAlerts'.
Open

        $group = NotificationGroup::findOrFail($request->input('id'));

StaticAccess

Since: 1.4.0

Static access causes unexchangeable dependencies to other classes and leads to hard to test code. Avoid using static access at all costs and instead inject dependencies through the constructor. The only case when static access is acceptable is when used for factory methods.

Example

class Foo
{
    public function bar()
    {
        Bar::baz();
    }
}

Source https://phpmd.org/rules/cleancode.html#staticaccess

Avoid using static access to class '\Seat\Notifications\Models\NotificationGroup' in method 'postAddAlert'.
Open

        $group = NotificationGroup::findOrFail($request->input('id'));

StaticAccess

Since: 1.4.0

Static access causes unexchangeable dependencies to other classes and leads to hard to test code. Avoid using static access at all costs and instead inject dependencies through the constructor. The only case when static access is acceptable is when used for factory methods.

Example

class Foo
{
    public function bar()
    {
        Bar::baz();
    }
}

Source https://phpmd.org/rules/cleancode.html#staticaccess

Avoid using static access to class '\Seat\Notifications\Models\NotificationGroup' in method 'postAddAffiliation'.
Open

        $group = NotificationGroup::findOrFail($request->input('id'));

StaticAccess

Since: 1.4.0

Static access causes unexchangeable dependencies to other classes and leads to hard to test code. Avoid using static access at all costs and instead inject dependencies through the constructor. The only case when static access is acceptable is when used for factory methods.

Example

class Foo
{
    public function bar()
    {
        Bar::baz();
    }
}

Source https://phpmd.org/rules/cleancode.html#staticaccess

Avoid using static access to class '\Seat\Eveapi\Models\Character\CharacterInfo' in method 'getEditGroup'.
Open

        $all_characters = CharacterInfo::all();

StaticAccess

Since: 1.4.0

Static access causes unexchangeable dependencies to other classes and leads to hard to test code. Avoid using static access at all costs and instead inject dependencies through the constructor. The only case when static access is acceptable is when used for factory methods.

Example

class Foo
{
    public function bar()
    {
        Bar::baz();
    }
}

Source https://phpmd.org/rules/cleancode.html#staticaccess

Avoid using static access to class '\Seat\Eveapi\Models\Corporation\CorporationInfo' in method 'getEditGroup'.
Open

        $all_corporations = CorporationInfo::all();

StaticAccess

Since: 1.4.0

Static access causes unexchangeable dependencies to other classes and leads to hard to test code. Avoid using static access at all costs and instead inject dependencies through the constructor. The only case when static access is acceptable is when used for factory methods.

Example

class Foo
{
    public function bar()
    {
        Bar::baz();
    }
}

Source https://phpmd.org/rules/cleancode.html#staticaccess

Avoid using static access to class '\Seat\Notifications\Models\Integration' in method 'postAddIntegrations'.
Open

                    ->attach(Integration::findOrFail($integration_id));

StaticAccess

Since: 1.4.0

Static access causes unexchangeable dependencies to other classes and leads to hard to test code. Avoid using static access at all costs and instead inject dependencies through the constructor. The only case when static access is acceptable is when used for factory methods.

Example

class Foo
{
    public function bar()
    {
        Bar::baz();
    }
}

Source https://phpmd.org/rules/cleancode.html#staticaccess

Avoid using static access to class '\Seat\Notifications\Models\NotificationGroup' in method 'postAddIntegrations'.
Open

        $group = NotificationGroup::findOrFail($request->input('id'));

StaticAccess

Since: 1.4.0

Static access causes unexchangeable dependencies to other classes and leads to hard to test code. Avoid using static access at all costs and instead inject dependencies through the constructor. The only case when static access is acceptable is when used for factory methods.

Example

class Foo
{
    public function bar()
    {
        Bar::baz();
    }
}

Source https://phpmd.org/rules/cleancode.html#staticaccess

Avoid excessively long variable names like $notification_group_id. Keep variable name length under 20.
Open

    public function getEditGroup(int $notification_group_id)

LongVariable

Since: 0.2

Detects when a field, formal or local variable is declared with a long name.

Example

class Something {
    protected $reallyLongIntName = -3; // VIOLATION - Field
    public static function main( array $interestingArgumentsList[] ) { // VIOLATION - Formal
        $otherReallyLongName = -5; // VIOLATION - Local
        for ($interestingIntIndex = 0; // VIOLATION - For
             $interestingIntIndex < 10;
             $interestingIntIndex++ ) {
        }
    }
}

Source https://phpmd.org/rules/naming.html#longvariable

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