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12:01
wow @Tek. You got a pretty large answer there form teresko. Though what the hell. You are trying to make a tiny MVC framework
Mornin' folks
Tek
Tek
@sinni800 Not really, just trying to understand the MVC framework and some of the details that are widely misunderstood along with it's many misconceptions.
And then you're trying to conform to the patterns... At this point you have destroyed tiny. Patterns are there so people can communicate upon one project
I just dropped in so I'm out of the loop, but if you rephrase your questions or doubts I might be able to help
Tek
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@sinni800 Nah, I wasn't really going to use it. All I wanted was to see how code was laid out. Kind of like a map, but in code.
12:06
@Tek Ah okay, good to understand your motives
Tek
Tek
@sinni800 You can find many UML maps, but you can never find code of how an MVC project is laid out. You can find frameworks, but it's many layers can be frustrating to pick apart and "picture" it.
@Tek Personally, would you really implement so many layers just for a small web site?
Tek
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@sinni800 No way. Though I can implement parts of the MVC model, which can help maintain it later. Plus if the code is decoupled is should be easy to migrate it into a bigger framework.
@Tek, have you tried looking at something like FuelPHP? It's a major framework, but I think the code is sufficiently simple for you to be able to pick it apart
Tek
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@Filipe I'm trying to stay away from frameworks and sticking to studying carefully trusted sources. A lot of frameworks implement MVC differently, and I want to avoid any bias
12:09
Well that's true, I've only seen a hand full of "MVC" frameworks that actually implement the MVC pattern
@Tak Sure, but what I did for a pretty small project is forget about the two layers of logic to access the database
Usually the problem is with the concept of Views, which most frameworks seem to treat as nothing but a template file with parameters
Tek
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@Filipe Yes, things like that don't help.
@Tak in the end I only had one, a layer that gives back objects (for each table one) and calls SQL.
@Tek found it: agavi.org
That framework correctly implements the MVC architecture, and is widely regarded quite probably the best implementation in the open source PHP world
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12:12
@Filipe Thanks, I'll take a look at it and see if it coincides with the information these guys have been talking about :)
And then again it implements things that are thought as bad, like the context singleton that is global
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@sinni800 What is "it"?
@Tek agavi
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@sinni800 You use it?
@sinni800 really? I have to say I never ventured in its code
12:14
@Tek @Filipe well as far as the documentation goes it does that
:disappoint:
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lol
I already got beaten up by teresko for doing that
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haha
Now the object is transparently injected through the request flow
Through constructors.
I just wondered, because:

"Agavi applications execute inside an envelope that's called the "context" of the application. This envelope is exposed to your application as the global singleton Context object."
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12:16
eek..
Global state killed my parents
Oh, sec, they should update their freaking documentation to stop saying "global"
$this->context
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@Filipe This is exactly why I'm not looking at frameworks.
It seems the context object is injected into your Controllers through the parent constructor after all
Or something along these lines
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@sinni800 Plus there's no sign of a data mapper which is the details I was interested in the most
12:18
@Tek Heh, seems so,.
@Tek I think I still might remodel my current database access into what teresko mentioned in that answer...
Tek
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@sinni800 What kind of calls are you making now?
@Tek Where? In the controller?
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for your database access
since that's what you're trying to change
@Tek Currently in my "Controllers" or, what I have found out, rather "Presenters" since they also fetch data
@Tek I use things like $model = new SomethingModel;
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Ah, I see. Yeah, the controller isn't supposed to have any db calls
12:23
@Tek And then call various things on Model, for example getSomethingById or whatever
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yeah
The controller doesn't know the DB in this case either, it just knows there's a class that spits out objects or arrays of objects with data
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yup
I just stole parts of concepts left and right.
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Right now I'm only having a little trouble with factories, abstract factories and mapper behaviour
12:27
The one thing I never got about pure mvc is what does the controller do if there is no data changing to be done?
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martinfowler.com/eaaCatalog/dataMapper.html The only clue I have of the mapper is this.
@sinni800 Routing
Just say "here you go, view"?
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Yep
@Tek this is actually what I have done so far..
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How else is the view supposed to know? you don't call the view inside the model
12:29
@Tek Of course, but I find it strange that the controller does like... nothing
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It IS doing something, it's job it's just to pass information.
The controller is in ways a context-specific extension of the main application router
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Take that out and you'd be calling the view in your models, but then your models would be coupled with the view
@Tek It just routes stuff, okay, but this is where I get stuck: Why code to implement something that is doing so little
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It's not doing little. It's like saying what's the purpose of a stop light?
12:31
In the end I made it call the model classes and fetch data from them, and give it to the view
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Just because it's turning off and on, something simple doesn't mean it isn't important
Because it splits concerns, basically
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It's keeping order
@Filipe For better lack of words, yes
Which is supposed to be wrong but at least it gives the controller a job, to pass information
You don't want to tie your controller logic to a view or a model, because then you're stuck with that interaction, or are forced to add in conditional checks for whatever interaction is occurring, involving the aforementioned view or model
12:32
I thought I couldnt just have the controller pass information and then the view gets it's own information from somewhere else.
A view is a view, a model is a model, they should have zero routing knowledge
Tek
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@sinni800 ^This.
@Tek they don't have those...
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Controller is just a link, everything has it's own purpose
Look up high-cohesion
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12:34
Controller is linker, view to present data, model for data
For me a link between the model and the view
Actually, according to the MVC pattern, the controller only has knowledge of the View
The View in turn works with the Model to present data
The View
oops
@Filipe This only makes sense in one way: The view knows how the data it gets looks, but it will never know how the data from the controller will look. It would imply some kind of tie
By "data from the controller" do you mean client input?
@Filipe what the controller gets from the model in this example
Tek
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12:36
@Filipe It doesn't matter where it's from, the view will get passed some sort of data, any
The controller shouldn't get anything from the Model, actually
@Filipe I was just doing an example..
The controller should simply dispatch an appropriate view, which in turn takes care of building the output with the available data
Tek
Tek
@sinni800 I see your example, but we already answered your question. Are you still confused? Or do you just have trouble accepting that the controller is that simple? :)
It seems I am, in my brain, more in favor of en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Model_View_Presenter
@Tek I can't take that I need to couple code that writes html with code that takes stuff from a modl
12:39
That's the most common implementation in the available frameworks, it seems
@Filipe it's easier on people's brains.
Model–view–controller (MVC) is a software architecture, currently considered an architectural pattern used in software engineering. The pattern isolates "domain logic" (the application logic for the user) from the user interface (input and presentation), permitting independent development, testing and maintenance of each (separation of concerns). History MVC was first described in 1979 by Trygve Reenskaug, then working on Smalltalk at Xerox PARC. The original implementation is described in depth in the influential paper "Applications Programming in Smalltalk-80: How to use Model–View–C...
What the heck kind of graphic does this have now
@sinni800 I honestly think it makes all the sense in the world, the View's job is exactly that, its purpose is to build the "view" (which can be anything from a CLI printout to an HTML string) with a set of data(s?)
@Filipe in theory I will need views for every kind of output now. Isn't that fun
Tek
Tek
@sinni800 The controller is it's own layer, you're not coupling anything. If you take it out your model you can use that model with any other code. It'll still work as expected. The same with view, if you take out the controller, your view will still work as expected (like injecting test data into view, for testing).
@sinni800 The MVC pattern has been greatly diluted, it gets confusing really fast
12:42
@Filipe I know how it works in theory.
@Filipe but I can't grasp it
@Tek wait wait wait. You are now saying I can inject test data into the view?
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Yes.
That's how unit testing works.
@Tek WHILE the VIEW takes it's data from the Model on it's OWN
Tek
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You can inject data into view by bypassing the controller (it doesn't have to be from the model, you can make up this data)
user680786
pretty cool image in the wikipedia, by the way. first image where all is presented correctly
@OZ the first image you mean? That just decouples the view from the model again
Tek
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12:44
@sinni800 read my edit
user680786
@sinni800 first image
@Tek If I have the view alone, it will still desire to hump the model to get data out of it
Isn't that what MVC defines?
This week on PHP - pattern fights!
Tek
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@sinni800 no
@Tek oh okay, now it's not. Before it was though
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12:45
@sinni800 Remember that view takes information, and that information can be anything
@sinni800 We can either fake (testing) or connect it (controller) with something else
@Tek from.. where? the Controller? But that doesn't take database data
@Tek so the database data comes swimming out of a cloud into the view?
And if we decide to change the weather.. it comes from the sea instead
Like if we remove poseidon to control the sea, the sea just flaps over and bringts bits to the view
No, seriously, where does the view get the data to present from? The model, right? But how can I make the view NOT take it from the model, but rather take it from my tests?
user680786
@sinni800 View is a object. So you can pass data to that object and it will be good, because no dependencies will be between view and models. But, when your architecture becomes too complex and it's better to create dependencies between models and views - it's a way too. But it's not way which I'll prefer/
Tek
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@sinni800 The view gets the data from wherever you tell it to get it to, it's not coupled (and shouldn't) be coupled from anything. It shouldn't be expecting to get it from model, or controller.
@sinni800 The controller just happens to tell view what data is receiving is all.
user680786
@Tek agree
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@sinni800 You can remove the view, put it in another project and inject the view with data from another source
12:49
@Tek so the controller tells the view to TAKE it from the model?
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@sinni800 yess, exactly
@Tek that makes as much sense as just giving the data to the view
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@sinni800 How else would you give the data to the view?
Directly from the model?
@Tek the same way we give the view the instruction to take it from the model
Tek
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Think about it
If you do that
You can't use model by itself
it will always expect a view
If you take it out and put it in another project
user680786
12:51
@sinni800 please let me know how to "give instructions"
@Tek Model expects nothing
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Tek
@sinni800 You just said the model expects to give it to the view.
@sinni800 Right?
@Tek That was the controller though
@Tek the controller gives instructions or something, right?
@OZ_ that's what I am asking
Tek
Tek
Hmm, forgot how to quote.
:1713237
user680786
@sinni800 controller can take data from model(s) and pass that data to the view. And View should take care how to present data.
12:53
@OZ_ Yeah it can, I don't see where this would be a bigger problem than having the controller just say where to get the data from
Tek
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"the same way we give the view the instruction to take it from the model"
@sinni800 What do you mean by this?
user680786
@sinni800 what?
I don't really know what the heck is going on here..
Tek
Tek
lol
user680786
lol
12:54
You guys thinking in patterns or thinking freely right now?
Tek
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@sinni800 I think you're just not getting the concept. If we wanted to teach you something else we'd be teaching you something else.
The View takes data from insert source here. This means that it knows how the data will look but not yet where to get it from.
Tek
Tek
@sinni800 Exactly. It doesn't care where it's from. It just takes it.
user680786
@sinni800 "don't ask, tell" - so View should just draw given data. And shouldn't care who gave that.
It knows that it's going to get a class that implements... model, for example, and gets data from it
Tek
Tek
12:56
@sinni800 Which means you can inject all different types of data because it doesn't care who gives it the data.
testing
4 mins ago, by Tek
Hmm, forgot how to quote.
hi
Tek
Tek
@cHao Remind me? :)
user680786
22 secs ago, by cHao
4 mins ago, by Tek
Hmm, forgot how to quote.
@Tek please do differentiate between "give data" and "give oppurtunity to get data"
Or this is only making it more confusing
12:57
@Tek click the little down-arrow to the left of the message, right click "permalink", and copy the address. then paste the url, and it'll onebox the message
Tek
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@sinni800 You could test the view and give it fake data via a fake class that has constant values.
@sinni800 aka testing
1 min ago, by OZ_
22 secs ago, by cHao
4 mins ago, by Tek
Hmm, forgot how to quote.
@Tek Give it data or give it a class that implements an interface to get data?
user680786
16 secs ago, by cHao
1 min ago, by OZ_
22 secs ago, by cHao
4 mins ago, by Tek
Hmm, forgot how to quote.
Tek
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@sinni800 That's the whole point of decoupling, it doesn't matter how you do it. :) Either way your view will get the data you're trying to give it.
12:59
@Tek if I give it data I drift into MVP territory
user680786
@sinni800 doesn't matter.
Tek
Tek
@sinni800 Same with model. It doesn't care where it's getting the data, it just knows that it's supposed to either store it or return data.
I don't know. I feel like I'm right were I was before this discussion
user680786
@sinni800 don't be afraid, it's just letters
Tek
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@sinni800 Your question is you don't get what the controller is for right?
(just answer 2 or 3 questions I have)
13:01
@Tek I do know what it is for
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then the problem is?
@Tek I'm getting the consequences now..
Either I have the controller just giving the view the oppurtunity to get data, in the end only doing a little routing
Or I have the controller know the model, get the data, give it to the view and have a lot more logic in the controller, but less logic in the view
user680786
@sinni800 controller is exactly for little routing
Tek
Tek
@sinni800 business logic should be in the model, not controller or view
@Tek can we differentiate between logic and business logic?
user680786
13:03
@sinni800 routing logic isn't business logic
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@OZ ^This
@OZ_ I just said Logic! It doesn't matter which it is...
user680786
@sinni800 does
Tek
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@sinni800 Routing logic is connecting. Business logic is like converting raw data from the database into formatted data FOR the view
You're just riding on words :/
user680786
13:04
@sinni800 I'm trying to help you, not to catch on words
For me all code is some kind of logic...
user680786
@sinni800 and different kinds of logic should be stored in different parts of MVC system
@OZ_ Let's just IMPLY I said "less presentational logic in the view"
the view is where you want presentational logic.
except if you're following MVP
user680786
13:06
yeah? so where is line between V and P then?
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@sinni800 Let me know when you're done talking with OZ since it's not helping that we're both talking about different things.
View being a dumbass that gets the pre cooked data and only puts it to the ... user agent
@Tek Yeah I feel like I am having two different conversations
user680786
@Tek sorry for interrupting you
Tek
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@OZ np, just let me know when you're done, I only have a couple of questions left
And P being the guy who gets the data and puts it into nice arrays so the view just takes it and iterates over it
Now I wonder... the Controller/Presenter prepares user data, right?
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13:10
define 'prepares'
@Tek checks if user data is usable for the current request
i woulda thought the model would handle that...
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@sinni800 no, that's the purpose of the domain object
@cHao Correct.
So the user data, whatever it is, gets checked right next to the database?
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@sinni800 preparing data is business logic
@sinni800 business logic goes inside the model
13:13
@Tek and checking data existance?
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@sinni800 also model, that's still business logic
@Tek practically if the query strings are there
@Tek well some have to be checked before, like the controller and action values.. But I get the drift
checking the controller and action values is routing logic. that goes in the controller
Tek
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@cHao ah, nevermind. You answered my question
@Tek the values called "controller" and "action"
Wait, what
How can the controller check the controller value?
13:16
or in your framework, for the controller value (since by the time you get to the controller, that should already be known to exist)
@cHao Well I would think a "main" or "front end" controller would check these
i was in the process of clarifying when you asked :)
@cHao Still a controller, I get it
Okay then
well @Tek.. You had more questions
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@sinni800 Well, I don't if you get why the controller has very little to do (although important).
@Tek I do get why but it still feels like a waste :D
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13:19
@sinni800 Then that's my next question. Why do you think it's a waste?
@Tek Because it feels like doing a lot of coding handwork to code layers that don't to much
Tek
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@sinni800 How else would you do it?
if the three are properly separated, you can easily change one with little-to-no effect on the others
like, you can totally change the layout (view) and leave the model and controller pretty much untouched
Tek
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@cHao We already went over than and he still thinks it's a waste. So I'm going to ask some questions and see what he says
ah. k, i'll just sit here and watch :)
13:22
Huh.
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@cHao Well, I have something for you so dont :D
@cHao You don't happen to know the answer to this, do you? chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/1712439#1712439
lol
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Tek
:)
Sorry if I think too little like the patterns demand me to
I feel like I am too creative to fit in those ;D
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@sinni800 That's not what we're saying at all.
13:24
@Tek what's this about a mapper?
@Tek "creative" could also mean "dumb"
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@sinni800 Though my question still stands, if it's such a waste, do you think there's a better way to do it?
@sinni800 lmao
@cHao data mapper.
The, for me, better way is exactly how MVP describes it
For me presenting existing data is already such a burden with all the css and html (in the case of a html output) that it's so big of a job to warrant it's own layer all alone
the mapper would have the sql, i'd think...or the names of stored procedures in te database (which would amount to the sql, if much less of it :) )
The controller has so little to do, so it feels pretty close to give it some of the presentational data to prevent code reuse if I want to have more than one output
For example I want to output data as json... I would have two views with the presentational logic of pulling the data in each
Tek
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13:28
@sinni800 Let me re-read what you just said so that I'm sure of what I just said.
In the ASP.NET MVC (Or MVP) they have solved it in a way that involves neither the controller or the view.
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@sinni800 Outputting the data as JSON. You mean just the text data by itself in json format?
@Tek The data that comes from the model as it is
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@sinni800 right
well @Tek ASP.NET MVC encourages you to extend the "Viewfinder" (I forgot the name of the class) that gets called if the controller returns a ViewResult
And extend it in such a way that the controller does not have to know about the possibility of the data being presented in a different way
13:31
so, you're taking control away from the controller?
Tek
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@sinni800 You didn't answer my question though.
A little bit
@Tek Wait, which one was that?
Tek
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2 mins ago, by Tek
@sinni800 Outputting the data as JSON. You mean just the text data by itself in json format?
I thought it was answered for you when you said
http://chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/1713838#1713838
Tek
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@sinni800 right as far as the data coming from the model, I don't know how you're presenting the json though. A different page?
13:33
@Tek a view in a different folder
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Tek
Right.
Okay.
How do you think you would do that with MVC?
You said two views?
@Tek Either that or
@Tek If I wanted to keep complete control to the controller, a JsonResult that extends the ControllerResult and returns formatted json
Which is where that decisive part is: I can't use the classic mvc pattern now anymore
and you'd avoid a json view because...?
Tek
Tek
@sinni800 AFAIK you're still using the mvc pattern
@cHao More code.
13:37
5 lines more code.
@cHao Json is a pretty standard form of output that does not need to be held by the hands by a view
Tek
Tek
@sinni800 And how would that work in MVP?
@cHao It can be implemented generally, ONCE.
Hello guys. @ircmaxell Got an interesting question for you.
it could. in a view, no less.
:P
13:38
@Tek In MVP you fetch the data in the controller and push it to a JsonResult
there's nothing tying a view to only one action, or even only one controller.
@cHao Right, I forgot about that
Tek
Tek
@sinni800 You're still routing the data from model to a jsonresult. That's MVC still.
@Tek what? Wouldn't that break the rules because I fetched data in the controller?
@sinni800 why? the model would build the data...the view would just "display" it
13:40
@Tek wait, wait, wait
NOW It's confusing.
lol
@ircmaxell Ever worked with Facebook "page tab"? I'm not fond of it (kinda detest facebook), but I'll stay objective. Basically, I used a URL to a wordpress site as the facebook page tab URL. I was logged in on this wordpress site, hence I saw the wordpress admin toolbar as usual.

Note that facebook uses a proxy when loading the page tab. In essence the page tab is just: <iframe src="facebook.com/proxy?site=http://mywpsite.com/"...>

The puzzling part is here: how am I seeing the admin toolbar inside the page tab when in fact the WP site is seeing Facebook as the requester, not myself?
I thought in MVC we "Route to the view, giving it the direction where to get the data" and in MVP we "Route to the view, giving it the raw array of data directly"
Doesn't the cross-domain policy stop facebook from accessing my admin cookie set for mywpsite.com?
Tek
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@sinni800 JSON is not raw data, it's formatted data. :)
13:42
@ChristianSciberras maybe the facebook "proxy" is only a redirect sometimes?
@Tek I am not refering to JSON..
Tek
Tek
@sinni800 Then?
@Tek how the view is called, basically.
@sinni800 I don't think so, though I can't be too sure.
@ChristianSciberras how about you try a wireshark?
@sinni800 hi. i have quick question. i have two buttons on home page. 1 for registration other is for login. shall i redirect to same php file after clicking both button to check validation and stuff or make two separate files
Tek
Tek
13:45
@sinni800 Can you show me in terms of code the difference of how it would be called?
@sinni800 I've been checking via firebug...
@ChristianSciberras oh ok.
@mann just a minute
well, not firebug exactly...chrome's dev tools
Tek
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@ChristianSciberras Same thing?
in ASP.net MVC, the controller returns a "result" -- basically, the renderer for a view. A JsonResult is just a result from a different (built-in) view
13:47
@Tek No, it's not the same thing. Chrome Dev tools were made by Google (you can see this in the source's credits).
Tek
Tek
@ChristianSciberras I'm talking in terms of functionality... lol
@Tek function someAction() { $data = $someInstanciatedModel->getData; $this->ViewData["model"] = $data; return $this->View("ViewName"); }
This is what I'd call MVP. For MVC I can't really make an example
@Tek Yeah, but there might be some bug that is in one but not the other. You can never be too careful.
@cHao this is how i modeled my little "MVC/MVP" system
Plus, some people in this chatroom are quick to bite your head off... (eg: @OZ)
13:48
Quick Question: Ubuntu 10.04 Server, If I am Compiling PHP from source. Do I need to recompile Apache from source? Can I use existing apache install(from apt-get)?
@Gaurish yes.
Tek
Tek
@Gaurish Yes
@Gaurish if you want to use mod_php, then yes
@cHao well doesn't matter.. fastcgi: even better
Will always work no matter what
@cHao
13:49
Since they interface not through library interfaces, but rather through TCP and stdin/stdout
i thought there was some stuff that the cgi sapi couldn't do...like something to do with authentication?
Actually, @sinni800 is right! I just did a full cache-less refresh and it did in fact list my wordpress website.
So, yes for using existing apache install?
Duh...me thinking they somehow defy laws...ah well...
@ChristianSciberras So it actually did a transparent http 302 redirect?
13:51
@Gaurish if you run php as cgi, then yes...just be sure that you don't tell it to build the apache php module
I have like 1k rep on SU and 300 rep on SO. Should that tell me something about how I should stop programming?
Tek
Tek
@sinni800 How would the controller know whether to display html or plain json with MVP?
should tell you to answer more questions. :)
@cHao I try, but that's where my problem is: I am far not as knowledgable about SO topics :P
@Tek maybe a user induced query string saying "json=1"
truth be told, about 1/4 of the questions i answer, i'm not sure of the answer til i answer the question (and do the associated research) :)
13:53
@Tek or not at all and another instance, determines this and leaves the controller out of it
@cHao about the "don't tell it to build the apache php module" part. it should some ../configure option right? I wonder if you could tell me which one? :P
oop...sorry, I meant to say
@cHao another weird phenomenom is when you ask a question and by asking you already answer it
@sinni800 that's way more common than you'd think. there's actually a name for it..."rubber ducking" :)
@Gaurish well it doesn't matter in the end. If it builds it... whatever, you have it
sometimes you just need to clearly define the problem, then the solution becomes obvious
Tek
Tek
13:55
@sinni800 They're both around the same lines of code. In MVC you would have something like this:
function datahtmlcalled()
{

$data = $someInstanciatedModel->getData;
$view = $someInstanciatedView->($data);

}
@Tek mouth falls to the floor
@Gaurish don't remember off the top of my head, no...but if you run configure, it should notice that you don't have the tools to build an apache module, and set the makefile stuff to not build it
Tek
Tek
@sinni800 o.O?
@Tek that's almost the SAME
Tek
Tek
@sinni800 Yep. lol Model-View-Presenter (MVP) is a derivative of the Model-View-Controller (MVC) software pattern
:)
13:57
is confused again
Tek
Tek
@sinni800 Go right ahead.
@Tek I thought you don't actually fetch the data from the model in MVC :/
I thought we had this earlier.
Tek
Tek
@sinni800 You do. How else would you route it?
of course you do.
how else would you display it?
Why, what, why
@cHao where does the View interface with the model in this case?
Tek
Tek
13:58
$view = $someInstanciatedView->($data);
as said above
datahtmlcalled() is the controller
@Tek isn't this the arrays of data?
the view gets its data from the model
@cHao THROUGH the countroller, right?
Tek
Tek
@sinni800 It's the entire object.
no.
Tek
Tek
13:59
@cHao No what?
@cHao why do we have a freaking controller method up there that says getData from a model and THEN gives it to the view?
Tek
Tek
@sinni800 That's routing, we said from the beginning it just passes data.
This is not getting better

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