I have two classes: ContactFormRepository and ContactForm. I also have a ContactFormController which contain methods that tell exactly what to do. i.e. it tells how to insert a ContactForm into the database by calling specific methods in the above mentioned two classes. However, including all logic in the Controller class would not be right. Yeah? Therefore, what should I do to separate logic in the Controller class? Logic such as validation checks, etc?
well if PDO are anything like children, then a ten year old one is better than a five year old one ... a ten year old one can make tea and do errands and the five year old spends a considerable amount of each day pretending he is an aeroplane, or spiderman ...
@HassanAlthaf I personally make my own Validator objects and use them for validation. That may be helpful. You can define a component that uses the repository and form, basically an additional layer of abstraction
@HassanAlthaf Not sure about the second question. First I have a ValidatorComposite that you add validators to with addValidator(Validator $validator). Each Validator has a validate method that throws an exception if data provided was invalid. For example, I have things like ArrayKeyExistsValidator and things like that. You add all your validators into one ValidatorComposite, call validate($data) on the composite, which loops around calling validate($data) on each individual
Validator, and you get an exception if the data wasn't okay. Just define an interface for Validator that states the validate method must exist and @throws ValidationException (top level validation exception, you can extend for specific types of validation exceptions) if the data wasn't okay
While both PDO and MySQLi are quite fast, MySQLi performs insignificantly faster in benchmarks - ~2.5% for non-prepared statements, and ~6.5% for prepared ones. Still, the native MySQL extension is even faster than both of these.
some guys comment: MySQLi is more powerful and probably more complex to learn. PDO is more elegant and has the advantage that you only need to learn one PHP API if you need to work with different DBMS in the future.
@HassanAlthaf You could implement that, for example in your ValidatorComposite::validate method you could catch the exceptions there and store them in an $exceptions[] array... then return the array of exception messages. Implementation is up to you :-)
I'd like a cleaner way to obtain the following functionality, to catch AError and BError in one block:
try
{
/* something */
}
catch( AError, BError $e )
{
handler1( $e )
}
catch( Exception $e )
{
handler2( $e )
}
Is there any way to do this? Or do I have to catch them separately?
...
@HassanAlthaf You don't, that's not how exceptions work, or generally what they are for. You throw exceptions when the code path cannot continue because e.g. there is bad user input or a database connection failed. It doesn't make sense to pass control back in to a try block, the only thing like that which might make sense (and this is rare) is a whole try/catch in a loop, where you might try again, but you start again from the top
try {
if ($var === 1) throw new IDontLikeTheNumberOneException("Ew, it's all straight");
if ($var === 2) throw new IDontLikeTheNumberTwoException("I don't like swans either");
} catch (IDontLikeTheNumberOneException $e) {
// handle the case where $var is 1
} catch (IDontLikeTheNumberTwoException $e) {
// handle the case where $var is 2
}
$this->return["data"]["messages"] = [
array_filter(
array_values($Exception->findMessages(
array(
"name.notEmpty" => 'Názov nemôže byť prázdny',
"name.length" => 'Názov musí mať dĺžku od 5 do 80 znakov',
"name.charset" => 'Názov nemôže obsahovať hacky-baky',
"text.notEmpty" => 'Text musí byť dlhší ako 5 znakov',
"text.length" => 'Text musí byť dlhší ako 5 znakov',
@DaveRandom Yeah, now it sorts first column and if there are more than 2 same values then sort it by second column i.imgur.com/O0QOY2E.png as Excel does with selecting 2 columns and sorting it by alphabet
It's pretty simple really... if sorting by the first column results in 0 (i.e. they are the same) then return the sort value of the second column. If the first column is different, just return that.
damn what am I doing wrong? why cant I use my connection variable and add it as a parameter for other functions? $connection = db_connect($connection);
connection is endefined even if it is within the function : /
Im doing this in order to prevent the use of "global"
@Patrick By the way. I just learned of $_SERVER["SCRIPT_FILENAME"]. Is there a way to get the url of $config = parse_ini_file('config.ini'); relative of the file it is included to?
@Patrick once I got the connection to my test server then I will integrate the rest but im not sure why I cant pass the connection from one function to another
@Patrick so here I read functions and no matter where I read about functions for newbies...it never tells you how to create a "read only" function parameter. The examples always show stuff that can be changed later by the user. For example func(x,y). calling func(10, -10)
I need to get the value of a parameter in a URL string. I can pass the URL to parse_str() and get the value. But the PHP docs don't show URLs being passed to that function, but just query strings. Would the correct way be to use parse_url() to get the query, and then pass the query string to parse_str() or does it really not matter?
@Demorus there are no read only function parameters. You can always overwrite the variable inside of the function (but it won't affect anything outside of it unless you passed it in as a reference, which you shouldn't).
@AnmolRaghuvanshi I know, but I need to get in actual contact with him
I have come as far as his blogger account with his not very useful and very common name which resulted in blogger.com/profile/11042521695514251708 but I doubt that is hom :)
Censorship in the US makes no sense. Female nipples are seen as explicit but Time can put a penis on their cover. https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/634378848516317184
3v4l.org/0oFo6 why am I getting 6:0 and not 6:00? I'm using lowercase 'i' so it should be minutes with leading zeros which according to the date docs is 00-59. Does DateTime use a different format? I'm probably doing something silly. =o\
I'm pleased to announce that I will be speaking at this year's @phpnwConf on Dependency Injection. Schedule: http://conference.phpnw.org.uk/phpnw15/schedule/ #php
@ScottArciszewski Cool, let me know what you think of them. I have a friend that works over there and from what I hear it's been a pretty successful product so far. It's kinda of like a backwards job search, which was their key defferinitiator.
I was wondering if anyone would mind taking 2 seconds to read my answer (and if the case be, let me know I'm crazy and should delete it). I feel a bit rogue, so I wanted to make sure I'm not being ignorant when it comes to DDD approaches.
This post is now 4 years old but I'd like to add a few things to this (still ongoing) debate.
I find myself aligned with the idea that it is not wrong to make a repository call from within an entity when a special need arises for it. Yes, I do agree that in many cases we can remodel our aggregat...
@Danack Cheers buddy, if you wouldn't mind when I've done the slides would you spare 10 mins to go over them with me and make sure I'm putting forward the right message?
@ThW Awesome! What changed your mind, the ability to heckle / throw things at me on stage? I thought you weren't coming?
Are you suggesting that a service will populate more stuff in the entity? I tend to think that a repository is a domain service.
I mean, a domain service should be responsible for filling in more parts (as opposed to lazy loading) or giving an entity some information (like unique'ness) from the repository?
Ok, so a domain service should be called (by our application layer) to fill in parts of the entity. The domain service can use the repository in a direct way to help in an aggregate.
But what does this buy us?
What's the danger of an entity doing this for itself?
So aggregates can only work with each other using events. Otherwise the application layer needs to call an aggregate and get something, then pass it to another aggregate. Right?