Okay I am working on a data access layer for grabbing and persisting domain objects. In trying to abide by SRP I want my the domain objects themselves to be blissfully unaware of all things persistence related. So if I wanted keep track of what portions of the object have change since creation to inform the persistence layer of how to best update the data store. How would I best do that without mucking up my domain objects?
@ocramius So would it make sense for the domain object to be responsible for keeping it's initial state as well as its current state... or should the initial state be elsewhere?
and additionally, you don't really need to track the entire state. You just need to track if something changed IMO
for now, I'm just using strict comparison of extracted state (to avoid problems with large graphs). I'm thinking of including custom comparators in ChangeSet
just because you moved the "what to do when something changed" to the comments does not change the fact that you are still calling those methods when you are altering something
only this way you are hiding the behaviour where no behavior should be hidden
So if every thing that is acquired from my persistence store registered it's original state with the store, and at time of persisting the object the store would then diff the object against it's registered original state and deal with it appropriately. Does that sound like a sane path?
@teresko I think it'll be fine... I may have to give myself a means to fetch from the store read-only to sidestep the overhead that would occur though.
Well I gotta get ... good night guys and thank you both @teresko and @ocramius
@igorw I disagree with this. The affront to readability is having array type hints all over the place. Functional style programming has a lot of benefits but readability is not one of them. In a lot of ways I still see it as a step backwards for enterprise-style projects where readability and maintainability are as important as working code.
At least it is made by someone who's made a wonderful testing tool for the PHP language. Hopefully some level of testing is included in that curriculum.
A cert is a cert though. Demonstrating your ability or showcasing it has to be more valuable no? I don't know. It's an easier view point for myself but it's not like I am in a position to actually judge.
@igorw Expounding on what I mentioned earlier -- basically I'm 100% in favor of immutability wherever possible and eliminating side effects. But I think there's a useful middle ground (in PHP anyway) where you can apply those concepts in combination with the advantages of typehinting for readability. That's what I was trying to express.