phpvms/modules/Awards/Awards/PilotFlightAwards.php
Nabeel S ea3ab21beb
391 Notification refactorings (#441)
* Refactor notifications to allow easier plugins

* Notification refactoring

* Formatting

* Move news to NewsService; cleanup of events

* More refactoring; added send email out for news item and the template

* Formatting

* Formatting
2019-11-20 10:16:01 -05:00

53 lines
1.5 KiB
PHP

<?php
namespace Modules\Awards\Awards;
use App\Contracts\Award;
/**
* Simple example of an awards class, where you can apply an award when a user
* has 100 flights. All award classes need to extend Award and implement the check() method
*
* See: http://docs.phpvms.net/customizing/awards
*/
class PilotFlightAwards extends Award
{
/**
* Set the name of this award class to make it easier to see when
* assigning to a specific award
*
* @var string
*/
public $name = 'Pilot Flights';
/**
* The description to show under the parameters field, so the admin knows
* what the parameter actually controls. You can leave this blank if there
* isn't a parameter.
*
* @var string
*/
public $param_description = 'The number of flights at which to give this award';
/**
* If the user has over N flights, then we can give them this award. This method
* only needs to return a true or false of whether it should be awarded or not.
*
* If no parameter is passed in, just default it to 100. You should check if there
* is a parameter or not. You can call it whatever you want, since that would make
* sense with the $param_description.
*
* @param int|null $number_of_flights The parameters passed in from the UI
*
* @return bool
*/
public function check($number_of_flights = null): bool
{
if (!$number_of_flights) {
$number_of_flights = 100;
}
return $this->user->flights >= $number_of_flights;
}
}