This rule aims to prevent redundancy in code. Assigning a variable to itself is a pointless operation that can lead to confusion and clutter in the code, making it harder to read and understand. It’s also a potential indicator of a mistake or oversight in the code, where a different assignment was intended.
This rule is important because clean, efficient code is a hallmark of good programming. Unnecessary assignments can slow down the runtime of the script and, more importantly, make the code harder to maintain and debug. In a large codebase, such redundancies can add up to significant inefficiencies.
To avoid this, always ensure that the right-hand side of an assignment is not the same as the left-hand side. If you find yourself writing var = var, it’s probably a mistake. Double-check your code to ensure that you’re assigning the correct variables. If you’re reassigning a variable to itself intentionally, consider whether this is really necessary and if there might be a cleaner way to achieve your goal.
Non-Compliant Code Examples
<?php$var=1;$var2=2;$var=$var;
Compliant Code Examples
<?php$var=1;$var2=2;$var=$var2;
Seamless integrations. Try Datadog Code Analysis
Datadog Code Analysis
Try this rule and analyze your code with Datadog Code Analysis
How to use this rule
1
2
rulesets:- php-best-practices # Rules to enforce PHP best practices.
Create a static-analysis.datadog.yml with the content above at the root of your repository
Use our free IDE Plugins or add Code Analysis scans to your CI pipelines