Class PHPProphet
A Prophet for built-in PHP functions.
Example:
$prophet = new PHPProphet(); $prophecy = $prophet->prophesize(__NAMESPACE__); $prophecy->time()->willReturn(123); $prophecy->reveal(); assert(123 == time()); $prophet->checkPredictions();
Namespace: phpmock\prophecy
License: WTFPL
Author: Markus Malkusch markus@malkusch.de
Link: Donations
Located at PHPProphet.php
public
__construct( Prophecy\Prophet $prophet = null )
Builds the prophet.
Builds the prophet.
Parameters
- $prophet
- optional proxied prophet
public
Prophecy\Prophecy\ProphecyInterface
prophesize( string $namespace )
Creates a new function prophecy for a given namespace.
Creates a new function prophecy for a given namespace.
Parameters
- $namespace
- function namespace
Returns
function prophecy
public
checkPredictions( )
Checks all predictions defined by prophecies of this Prophet.
Checks all predictions defined by prophecies of this Prophet.
It will also disable all previously revealed function prophecies.
Throws
If any prediction fails.
public static
define( string $namespace, string $name )
Defines the function prophecy in the given namespace.
Defines the function prophecy in the given namespace.
In most cases you don't have to call this method. phpmock\prophecy\PHPProphet::prophesize()
is doing this for you. But if the prophecy is defined after the first
call in the tested class, the tested class doesn't resolve to the prophecy.
This is documented in Bug #68541. You therefore have to define
the namespaced function before the first call.
Defining the function has no side effects. If the function was already defined this method does nothing.
Parameters
- $namespace
- function namespace
- $name
- function name