Sorry off topic, but I can't find any other plays to ask... Is there any class rooms here on stack like akubuntu.com has? http://chat.stackexchange.com/rooms/663/ask-ubuntu-classroom
Suppose I have a PostController, PostModel and PostView. PostView has renderPostNotFoundPage() method. The question is, should the PostController use PostModel::doesPostExist($postID) method to decide whether or not to call PostView::renderPostNotFoundPage()? If I do that, will that be asking, rather then telling? Is the design wrong?
@KamilTomšík - the call is to render a post, say /post/$id - the router routes the request to PostController since it's the URI that are supposed to show a post, I don't understand why it should be BlogController - can you tell me why?
this is subjective - a lot of people is okay with idea of PostController handling all post actions, but PostController should really operate only on one given post, and because you don't have that post yet, you can operate only on blog, that's why you should have BlogController
@KamilTomšík - how about this: controller tells the model to grab the post contents, but wraps the call in try .. catch. The model throws PostNotFoundException, which is caught by the controller, and the controller tells the view to render 404 instead.
anyway, MVC just makes it harder - you want $blog->readPost($id); and blog should just do it. and if post does not exist, it should also be able to show error page.
something in that sense, but I really dislike returns...
Well, here is a question: if I inquire about the state of the object A, but doesn't use that information to change the state of object A, does that break the 'tell, don't ask' principle? According to the definition here, it seems it doesn't:
> The problem is that, as the caller, you should not be making decisions based on the state of the called object that result in you then changing the state of the object. The logic you are implementing is probably the called object’s responsibility, not yours. For you to make decisions outside the object violates its encapsulation.
@rickchristie yeah, you're right, tell dont ask is vague, and allows getters for "just" rendering, etc. that's why I like to use term "east-oriented" which is much more exact - no returns at all...
@Gordon I've found some great slides by A. Hollub, if you're interested (oo, tda, east oriented) - it's summary of his book. bit.ly/fGjmu1 - should be familiar to what I was saying around here...
@rickchristie have a look on that too
@ChristianSciberras have a look on that too - there's part about base classes
hi all, on my local machine, i have two php.ini files: php.ini.default php.ini.default-5.2-previous. running phpinfo() just tells me that the php.ini is located in etc but doesn't mention which php.ini is in use. any other way to find out?
ok, let's leave that apart. Let's see if I understand what you're saying. if it isn't $field->validator, the only option would be for each type of validator to have list of fields, no?
bottom of the line : there are a lot of duplicated code (both on API side and internally) , the object graph is backwards and you are using global state ( in the form of singleton ) causing additional "magic" side-effects
@teresko - so for that to work, in both cases, there should/would be a validator which ensures multiple fields have the same value; interaction between fields.
Yeah, validator has to be ctor'ed not class name
I may have to pass validator arguments, such as to match with a certain field or multiple validators.
i suspect that my understanding of Forms is a bit different , especially since i use HMVC for my application structure , and then form is just another MVC triad
Either case, that's why label is a module by itself. I just thought, well someone might want to have multiple labels pointing at the same field. Or labels which move focus to a different position on the page (instead of the item on its right).
ok, whatever - just tell me: can it do inline editing? can you theme it? can you separate those labels and hints outside of code? because it just takes space, it's not important for understanding that form.
@teresko - Ideally, I could tone down all the redundant crap like "name=>label2" etc
I like how you did the validation part
@KamilTomšík - Inline editing, don't know what you mean by that. Themeable, sure can. Separate labels/hints, why shouldn't I? The whole hierarchy works better with @Gordon's suggestion of a parent property.
Now I don't even have to worry about finding the form - I just go to the topmost parent.
@teresko what if you wanted "city" and "state" to show up one after each other? (horizontally)? I suppose it would have been a "Css issue" right?
Validator class contains list of methods ( not that good idea in hindsight , but works ) , and the second argument for Form::add_field sets the rules for field , where is_{$rule} is a name for validation function
@ChristianSciberras the order in which you ad fields does not matter
validations are tricky, and even the best possible form layer can't satisfy all needs. so writing form layer with perfect validation is like finding golden hammer - it's probably impossible. but there's a twist, if you're interested.
@ChristianSciberras You know, I honestly wouldn't be surprised if we had builtin functions for creating blogs in PHP 7 ;) PHP likes adding functions :D
@teresko Are you still using that CS nowadays? Cuz it's neither ZF nor PEAR (which is bad). Additionally you are using parenthesis when using include - this is pure evil.
basically, on certain pages it would get stuck downloading the page, as if the network suddenly became too slow. But it stayed that way no matter the amount of refreshes.
@ChristianSciberras include - just like require or echo - is NOT a function. The parenthesis are not part of the construct. If you use include('file.php') you can as well write include((((('file.php'))))) - it's just as pointless
@ChristianSciberras btw: do you know that we all hate forms? not implementation, but actual usage - filling them? :) just wanted to point it out - no form is good form.
and if you really need forms - why restrict them? why validate anyway? it's just annoying - somebody wants some information, and provides you textfield - so you write something and boom - he's not happy, he wants something else...
but it's not your fault - it's developer's fault - because he don't know what he wants! he only knows what he don't want...