@argentum47 besides, you have to remember that Rails was never intended to production-stage. Instead it was created as a rapid-prototyping framework. And it's quite good at that. Problems start when you attempt to create something larger.
Guys, what is a good way to organize your data/code to be able to make data visible to some users and not visible to others. For example there are different levels of visibility (the people are in groups with different permissions) and you have to check that, where should that happen?
Ok for example you have people that are connected to you in the application and people that are not. People that are connected to you should see all your posts but people that are not connected to you should see only your public posts
@RonniSkansing Hey, I'm following that tutorial, but I am unfortunately not having any idea why to use 'HTTP' in Composer. Can you explain the use of it to me?
@FlorianMargaine mm.. Not installed on the server.. Just asked my supervisor if it's possible to get it installed, but he said no.. So go back to the abstract class then? :)
Suggestions how I can 'calculate' between 2 objects? I have a check_in and a check_out field : But when I do: <td>$row->check_out - $row->check_in</td> I receive : 2015-01-18 - 2015-01-17 >< So its not doing the calculation.
I am writting a little php app (MVC) connecting to a CMS (an external website on which I have no control).
The goal of the app is to perform CRUD actions in the CMS on behalf of the user, like creating / deleting / updating pages.
In my app, I have come with two distinct functionalities:
- som...
@Patrick thank you for your link but my question is not so much about MVC (I mean the app is built on a MVC framework) but more about how to organize the code and those 2 aspects, ie client and resource parts
@HassanAlthaf it is to isolate and incapsulate the code that deals with globals (because globals are bad). So instead of using methods like header(..) and globals like $_GET, $_POST, you instead use some class (like the request / response). So no echo out content, in the tutorial instead $response->setContent(..)
@Jimbo no you don't, you do it when returned (if you have to). If your back-end is properly implemented, no such checks should be necessary because you wouldn't allow such errors
@HassanAlthaf the router is a class for setting up routes. It will act as a front controller, a main entry for all and every request. Did you add it to your composer.json and do a composer update
@ziGi but the CMS is external to my app, I have no control on the CMS, my app aims at connecting to the CMS and performing the tasks allowed on behalf of the user
1. index.php - bootstrap the app initialize some necessary classes 2. Router class takes the URI and determines what is required from it (Create, Read, Update, Delte) 3. Router calls appropriate controller if the user has access to that controller (authentication) 4. Controller calls appropriate Service layer (which is basically the brain of the business logic) 5. Service creates a Domain Objects and Data Mappers so the Data Mappers know how to extract or persist data to/from the Domain Object 6. The domain object is converted in the service to an output which is returned to the controller
I think he's asking how to organize his logic so he has 2 modules that do different things (creating web page files) and generating content and how one module can access information from the other
that's why he thinks he should use traits or something
@IamZesh I am not sure if I am correct but usually I would have a FilesService that creates files and DataService (this is a bit general) that returns some data so the FileService calls the DataService when it needs data
@IamZesh Maybe this helps. See FilePageReader. This class is responsible to return the content of a page. It could also be a DbPageReader for example. There is an interface so the client code doesn't care where the page actually comes from. If this is too confusing, start at the beginning of the tutorial
@tereško is it possible that a Service makes a call to another Service to get some information or is it more logical to call the same Domain Objects and Data Mappers to obtain the same information?
@ziGi Don't treat this like MVC where you can only have Controller and Model classes. It's just a PHP class. Follow SOLID and make as many classes as you need
I was just wondering, so I make an EmailSender and then ReminderObject, ReminderMapper, EmailContentBuilder so the mapper populates the ReminderObject which is then used by the EmailContentBuilder to fill in a template with the data and then the EmailSender uses the EmailContentBuilder to take the prepared email content to send it to the appropriate receiver?
I think the best option is to use a DI container for creating services (yes, that means that services get initialized outside the controller) and then you use DIC's functionality to share instances between services.
@ziGi I don't like entities in my templates. I used to do that and it resulted in a lot of work when an entity changed... I prefer to return an array from my service that is used in a controller instead
@ziGi this is what all my domain objects inherit: gist.github.com/teresko/4f09e3ed351bcb19d4fe .. that way you can populate the domain object without depending on the precise structure. But in general - yeah, mappers can only persist domain objects which implement a specific interface.
My colleague is arguing with me that I should rename EmailSender to EmailMessanger and instead of extending Sender I should extend Messanger. What do you think is he right? He said Sender is not descriptive enough.
Maybe the namespace should be renamed.. it is a cascading challange. If the refactor of the class name and the parent is a quick fix and you think it adds value, do it. Else consider if it really worth spending time arguing over
@Patrick tbf, I call array properties either whateverArray or whateverMap depending on whether they're ordered or associative, to differentiate them from eachother and custom collection types.
I'm trying to test the native-tls branch for the RFC. I'm slightly confused by the instructions - do I really need to alter the m4 files of any extensions that I want to compile with native-tls to include "-DZEND_ENABLE_STATIC_TSRMLS_CACHE=1"? Is there no way to pass that in as a compile option?