@NikiC also on linux: Warning: PHP Startup: Invalid library (maybe not a PHP library) 'php_popov.dll' in Unknown on line 0 getting the same error on windows too (enabled display_startup_errors)
@Abe vamping about creating extensions is more than welcome here :-P After all that's what the chat is about… helping people interact with Zend php-src.
That we occasionally discuss about doing things in PHP is a side effect of our working on PHP.
... not sure what you mean but those are two different words. Can I use table instead of elevator?
Some days ago there were some talk about decorators and templates. I don't want to get back on the __toString abuse or not, rather on the correct understanding of what decorating means. For instance, when using forms. One state presents an entity, another one presents this entity, but modifiable, through a form. Is a valid use of decorator to wrap the base entity in a class that would present it's base properties inside form inputs?
More exactly, I have a renderer rendering a template from an object with a getTitle() method. I can either render it with the base entity, showing the title, or the decorating entity, showing this title in a modifiable input.
@FélixGagnon-Grenier I think the 'correct' pattern is to use a factory that takes the 'Entity' and returns a new object that is a "RenderableEntity". That is not decoration really (as the new object is not a sub-class of the old type, but instead is encapsulation.
Interesting too - some people are in the school of thought to provide an entity to the template to be rendered
I prefer explicitly providing scalars to the template to be rendered
Perhaps providing the entities to a View, which then provides scalars to the Template. Gah, we've talked about this before, but I've yet to see a super simplified example that I can take away and expand on
@FélixGagnon-Grenier also, I think you always want to do this encapsulation/transformation as late as possible. Otherwise you end up passing around objects that you 'think' other objects need, which makes stuff more complicated as is a violation of the law of Demeter
yeah...but that's a slightly different use case isn't it? converting objects to pure data, and then rendering that data to xml/json is different from rendering HTML...usually.
@Jimbo the issue with that is that you then need to know how the 'View' wants to display stuff....which is probably bad thing. For example if the object has a date field in it, that could be displayed as a "10th July" or unix epoch or "10:20am" or any other way.....If you pass the object to the view layer, the view can choose the appropriate renderer for that object, that formats the date precisely how the view wants it, without anything else needing to know how the view renders stuff.
@Danack But I'm passing entities to the view. Objects. Like a \DateTime. Isn't it then fine for the view to say "Okay, I'm rendering to HTML this time, I'm turning this \DateTime object into XY format, before I pass it to the template renderer as a string". Meh, I'm not getting it
{inject name='factory' type='SummaryFactory'} {inject name='blogPost' type='BlogPost'} {$summary = $factory->create($blogPost)} {$summary->render()} <!-- Only prints out the first 200 characters of a blog post -->
@Jimbo That means that if your web monkeys front-end developers need to change how something is displayed, they need to touch the back-end as well, and I think that is something to be avoided.
Does anybody know what's the correct format for subjectAltName in openssl_csr_new? Or is there something different I miss, because the extension is not listed, it's just merged into the subject.
in my latest project view model entities are immutables, they just have getters, everything is localized, dates are already formatted etc. the only thing i'm not sure about yet is if they should also escape html
the result is great. when i write the domain logic i don't need to care at all of displaying stuff. the write model is specifically designed to maintain the business domain and nothing else.
@Abe Separating services into Application and Domain layers helped me allow different things like CLI / HTTP use the same codebase, just go through a different part of the application layer
it's not just services though, the application has its own model (domain model & application model)
i need an interesting project to try some stuff out
and twice the time i have currently
:D
another thing i want to try is applying cqrs also to services. separating the "obtaining the data from the repositories" from the "doing stuff with them"
Isn't that just injecting a repository, and an object that does something with the data from the entities, into a service, that uses the repository to get the entities (say, with some specific query), which then passes it to the doing thing object
class Service { public function __construct(Repository $r, MessageSender $c) { } }
yes thats what you usually do today, but i want to have service methods obtaining already fetched data, rather than initiating themselves the read from the database
the problem with that code is that sometimes you can't reasonably wrap the service method (in some outer service method) without messing up things with database transactions, row locks and stuff
not sure if i'm being clear enough @Jimbo sorry :( my english is usually bad but is especially bad when i'm tired
So, how I see it possibly working out, is that your controller would garner the id from the request, ensure it's valid as in non-domain-logic wise (it's an integer, for example) and then pass it to your application layer, which takes the integer, uses the repository to convert it to a business object, then passes the business object to your domain layer to do stuff with it
I see the separation defined by constructor parameters... the application layer takes simple scalars, nothing to do with business objects. The domain layer asks for business objects
(DI wise)
That's what I got from the book, could be complete bollocks :P
but i was mainly focusing on the service method, rather than how data gets inputted to them
function doStuff($id, $stuffParam){ $stuff = $this->repo->fetchStuff($id); // i don't want the service method to actually "fetch" here. the repo must have Stuff with id $id already in memory $stuff->doStuff($stuffParam); }
Sometimes, when I realize programmers, probably even some of them we speak with daily here on so, do shit like this, extorting, spamming, I get filled with rage and hatred.
$userServices->prepareRequirementsForUpdateUsername($userID); // fetches the user $userID and keeps it into the repo, locks the row for writing $userServices->updateUsername($userID, $newUsername);
so updateUsername would fail if i didn't previously fetched the user by calling that method
the ultimate goal of that is fetching requirements of a transaction in a predetermined order, so that i can avoid deadlocks entirely (99% of times, actually :B)
In concurrent programming, a deadlock is a situation in which two or more competing actions are each waiting for the other to finish, and thus neither ever does.
In a transactional database, a deadlock happens when two processes each within its own transaction updates two rows of information but in the opposite order. For example, process A updates row 1 then row 2 in the exact timeframe that process B updates row 2 then row 1. Process A can't finish updating row 2 until process B is finished, but process B cannot finish updating row 1 until process A is finished. No matter how much time is allowed...
@Jimbo don't need them, it's just about writing an api that doesn't suck :D
back to C. i'm getting an *uninitialized* and i have no idea what it is
Or just pour them from the bag directly into your mouth.
Param naming time: I'm serving up some Javascript files that get packed together into a single request with a URL like /js/file1,file2,file3 which matches a route like: /js/{$whatIsAGoodNameForThisParam}