respect-validation/library/Rules/AnyOf.php
Henrique Moody 94ddfcd0bd
Create named constructor to create Result
The constructor of `Result` has many arguments, but that's not the
primary reason why I'm making this change. I want to change the
constructor, and it will become more complicated, so having this named
constructor will be useful in the next refactoring.

With this change, I also made the `id` mandatory. That made the
constructor look neater and most to promote almost all properties to the
constructor.

Another change was removing the `fromAdjacent` method, which was quite
confusing. I created the `asAdjacentOf` method, which is a bit clearer.
If anything, it makes all static methods named constructors. It will be
a bit more verbose, but more intuitive.
2025-12-26 22:34:43 +01:00

39 lines
1 KiB
PHP

<?php
/*
* Copyright (c) Alexandre Gomes Gaigalas <alganet@gmail.com>
* SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT
*/
declare(strict_types=1);
namespace Respect\Validation\Rules;
use Attribute;
use Respect\Validation\Message\Template;
use Respect\Validation\Result;
use Respect\Validation\Rule;
use Respect\Validation\Rules\Core\Composite;
use function array_map;
use function array_reduce;
#[Attribute(Attribute::TARGET_PROPERTY | Attribute::TARGET_CLASS | Attribute::IS_REPEATABLE)]
#[Template(
'{{subject}} must pass at least one of the rules',
'{{subject}} must pass at least one of the rules',
)]
final class AnyOf extends Composite
{
public function evaluate(mixed $input): Result
{
$children = array_map(static fn(Rule $rule) => $rule->evaluate($input), $this->rules);
$valid = array_reduce(
$children,
static fn(bool $carry, Result $result) => $carry || $result->hasPassed,
false,
);
return Result::of($valid, $input, $this)->withChildren(...$children);
}
}