Avoid using static access to class '\DrdPlus\Health\MalusFromWounds' in method 'I_can_not_create_positive_malus'. Open
MalusFromWounds::getIt(1);
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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 '\DrdPlus\Health\MalusFromWounds' in method 'I_can_not_create_worse_malus_than_minus_three'. Open
MalusFromWounds::getIt(-4);
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- Exclude checks
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 '\DrdPlus\Health\MalusFromWounds' in method 'I_can_use_it'. Open
$malusFromWounds = MalusFromWounds::getIt(-2);
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- Exclude checks
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 '\DrdPlus\Health\MalusFromWounds' in method 'I_can_use_it'. Open
$malusFromWounds = MalusFromWounds::getIt(0);
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- Exclude checks
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
The method I_can_not_create_positive_malus is not named in camelCase. Open
public function I_can_not_create_positive_malus()
{
$this->expectException(\DrdPlus\Health\Exceptions\UnexpectedMalusValue::class);
$this->expectExceptionMessageMatches('~1~');
MalusFromWounds::getIt(1);
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CamelCaseMethodName
Since: 0.2
It is considered best practice to use the camelCase notation to name methods.
Example
class ClassName {
public function get_name() {
}
}
Source
The method I_can_use_it is not named in camelCase. Open
public function I_can_use_it()
{
$malusFromWounds = MalusFromWounds::getIt(-2);
self::assertInstanceOf(MalusFromWounds::class, $malusFromWounds);
self::assertSame(-2, $malusFromWounds->getValue());
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CamelCaseMethodName
Since: 0.2
It is considered best practice to use the camelCase notation to name methods.
Example
class ClassName {
public function get_name() {
}
}
Source
The method I_can_not_create_worse_malus_than_minus_three is not named in camelCase. Open
public function I_can_not_create_worse_malus_than_minus_three()
{
$this->expectException(\DrdPlus\Health\Exceptions\UnexpectedMalusValue::class);
$this->expectExceptionMessageMatches('~-4~');
MalusFromWounds::getIt(-4);
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- Exclude checks
CamelCaseMethodName
Since: 0.2
It is considered best practice to use the camelCase notation to name methods.
Example
class ClassName {
public function get_name() {
}
}