Also, I don't have or need a degree to get the particular jobs I want, but am pursuing a BA for other reasons.
(Notably because the upper level CS classes are really interesting. This Fall I'll get to work with 50GB of data from real companies to learn the basics in data mining and dealing with "big data")
@LeviMorrison Networking and Communications, the program was stuff like Cisco router config and Windows Server admin. I hate that stuff though, and have never done it professionally.
@FrontpageExpert your mapper is a dependency of the repo, it's just the mechanism to convert data for/from the DB. As for the save(), there is no save(), there is add() and then there is update() eventually (if you're not using UoW)
@LeviMorrison That's why I'm on the fence about it, I feel like I can talk the talk and walk the walk, IF employers give me that first call. My uncertainty is whether I will ever get the call without the magic "BA" letters on my resume. I still owe student loans for my AS, if I went back to school I'd have to pay it up front. I work at a nonprofit, so I get paid very far below industry average. The job market seems to be pretty healthy, nationally and even in my home state (Michigan).
@FrontpageExpert it's just the right terminology :-) If you're not employing a UoW, then you should be specific about what you do with the repo, and not assume upserts all the time
I'm the first person from my ancestry to go to college. The first lesson I learned after graduating is that it probably wasn't worth it. None of my coworkers here (doing the same job for the same pay) have any degree at all.
Going to a university might be valuable just for guidance on what to read! There are so many books out there, but anything I've tried to pick up aimlessly seems to be too introductory for my tastes.
I spend a lot of my time on political activism too, and I think that if I tried to improve my programming skills, I'd need to "quit politics" for a while. I added both those books to my reading list, if anyone else has some good foundational books that don't waste a lot of time on entry-level concepts, lay em on me :)
@LeviMorrison YUSSSS! Populate my GoodReads want-to-read list with programming goodness! I'd be a happy man if I never made it to the Vonnegut book that's been lonely on there for half the year.
@ircmaxell I'm not really sold on the TypeException thing, especially given how it used for some error conditions that are arguably not type-related, e.g. argument count mismatches.
I have read in bood about laravel 4 unit testing that facade pattern is so good for testing
user924016
No not really, it can just be achived, but it is not a good way to do it or a "better" way. Now that you are using L5, instead use its reflection injection, type hint what you need, it will be autoloaded and injected
Weird: Fatal error: Call to undefined function imagecreatefrompng() in soo. I have to install GD lib.. but when I check my phpini: gd support is enabled.
@Darius.V He knows about Laravel, to be sure. That doesn't mean he's any kind of authority on programming practices in general. Do some reading outside the Laravel ecosystem and you'll find plenty of knowledgeable people talking about testing, using static classes, and why it isn't a good thing.
user924016
it's all magic and the bad kind
user924016
I spend some time digging into the framework and there is alot which I do not think should be done in X Y way.. beyound the statics thing
user924016
primarly because someone said to me "oh you are not forced to use the 'facades/statics"
@ChrisBaker - this book looked easy to understand, I did not finish it yet and so I like it. Maybe in other books its much harder to adapt to laravel. Thats why I choose book with laravel examples
But, back to an earlier conversation: you could sit down and make a framework you're happy with, and someone else will come along and say you did X wrong or Y is a piece of shit. I wouldn't write off Laravel completely, but I wouldn't use it. What I would write off completely is using static facades as a global service locator.
Still I believe after reaing this book I should be better at testing than I was before even when doing as this book says, shouldn't I ? otherwise I feel like I would jump to other hard to adapt book to laravel
and end up strguling too much
user924016
20:14
At first I thought it was just a queue.. seems it is much more
@PeeHaa There isn't anything like uniformity or a unanimous consensus on what is and isn't the best practices at the language core level, how could there possibly be any kind of unity at the end-user level? I can't think of a single framework using PHP that a majority of developers would even describe as"good, let alone perfect.
user924016
Ok, many who migrated from CI went to Laravel
user924016
Read the book, get started with some tests, but please
user924016
20:15
spend some time, writting some decoupled classes
user924016
and unit tests with phpunit.. no framework, just your vanilla code and phpunit
The conversation gets meta pretty fast, but there's one thing that is clear: no matter what framework you're using, there are some top-level best practices that DO have consensus. One of them is not using global variables. Static facades are global variables. So, you can use Laravel if you want to, and I won't agree with your choice. Use its facades, though, and I'll say with confidence you're wrong. (weird edit)
@Darius.V forget about MVC, use the controller just as entry points into your application. Use as many plain php classes as you need for your application logic. Hint: it will be much more than 1 per controller
Ok lets say I need in a class those facades: App, Config, Input, Log, Session, Validator, View - those I use the most and they are used in many classes. So there are already 7 dependecies from those alone. So what if I need them all - what to do and to not have many dependecies?
in laravel 4 there is App, this is used bit more rarely, so I dont remember now why it is used for
user924016
App, what do you need this dependency for? Config, should not be injected into the controller Input -> should come from Reqest / Response Log -> put into middlewares Session -> inject into a service which you depend on validator -> inject into a service which you depend on
user924016
and the tutorial @Patrick gave you is .. great >=]
Ronni - I do not remember about App, but I remember I needed this facade at work
"Config, should not be injected into the controller " - I need to get some config. But maybe middlware can solve this, do not knwo. And in laravel 4 there is no middleware, so then write myself?
user924016
Ok.. =] anyways, I am sure you already have lots to try out now
@Darius.V tl;dr: They're using a standard term in a non-standard way; they're just fancy static methods, and thus have all the potential baggage that static stuff carries around, like what is effectively global state.
The correct way to solve this would be to inject the database handle into the other class (dependency injection):
$db = new DB_MySQL("localhost", "root", "", "test"); // connect to the database
include_once("pagi.php");
$pagination = new Paginator($db);
$records = $pagination->get_records("SELE...
^^^ that's another thing -- working code beats the crap out of theoretically awesome code that you haven't written yet because you aren't sure how. Only one of those will get you a paycheck if your job is to write working code :)
its interesing - why in PHP people learn so lot wrong stuff from the frameworks and other people. I saw some legacy code where was html , database , and php in one long file. Why people learn such things or why others teach such things :)
probably in other language communiteis there is no such thing, or is it?
@Ocramius thanks. I get to practice my "magic" and my refactor skills.. but when you are hardcoupled to a old framework, it is sometimes kind of impossible to break out any use good pattern.. because I am stuck inside a box..
user924016
which is why I am building a super front controller...
user924016
Attack plan. 1. Upgrade PHP. 2. Put a front controller infront of the front controller. 3. Migrate each painfull part, bit by bit
@ChrisBaker If I work with you and you use globals to get your code working, I'll put in some effort to make sure you won't be getting that paycheck for much longer ;)
@Patrick yea that would be ideal and I would def recommend that. I wrote it because person X might be migrating to another shitty framework.. and this shitty framework (Laravel5) loads the entire application at the point you reach the router (the route Provider contains a ref to the entire loaded application container)
yeah. But worth it anyways, you'll spend more and more time in the new code. The stuff that gets done last are the rarely used parts
haha
user924016
20:51
But yea the more I think of it.. my package is a gateway to another shitty framework where you have a "heavy load" when you hit the router already.. I name it escapism originally.. maybe it was a better name after all
Having now another problem: my route now works when I run with Advanced rest client. But it still shows NotFoundHttpException when it is called by backbone.js . Any ideas how can that be possible?
The word "todo" has, through labyrinth word association and poor eyesight, gotten the song "Africa" by Toto stuck in my head for the rest of the day. Thanks, Obama.