just read some book on veganism. any vegan phprogrammer 'round here?
(how do you manage to not eat meat? is my question. Morally and environmentally veganism is pretty much the only viable option for humanity on the long term, but I just can't stop eating meat (yet))
Quick question for you. for nikic/FastRoute How can I set route from two different place/file? For main app route from main route.php and other routes from modules/route.php ?
@Orangepill with static class it's really easy store in class variable but with normal class not sure.
You can either collect up all of the routes from the modules in the route collector or you can abandon fast route in favor of a more hierarchical routing library.
All this secnario work with static class Example: I have class `Route()` From Main application I set route and it's work with static methods of class Route::get('/', 'HomeController@index'); Route::get('/test', 'HomeController@index'); Route::get('/data', 'HomeController@index');
and I can access class this class from everywhere it's autloaded from begining. Also I can call from my modules for new routes.
Now I read couple of articles and it says that don't use static class it's not good prectice for test code and many mroe things.
@marcio I burned through some easy answers to get reputation, and I am finally here
I do have to make some curmudgeon comment about IRC being good enough, don't trust the blasted 3rd party services.
@NikiC thanks for the code review! I think I addressed hopefully everything, I need to call it a night but wanted to give a thank to everyone that help. @bwoebi and @marcio have been super helpful as well, thank you!
@Sajad Your constructor is only to create the object in it's valid state. If you have code used through multiple methods, put it into a protected method and just call that method multiple times in your other methods
How deep down the rabbit hole do you need to go for dependency injection? Eventually you'll hit a point where you need to create the object in order to pass it on. For example, at what point to you establish a PDO object in order to pass it on?
Quick question: how should I solve a case when making class called "UserEntityUpdater" for entity (let's say "UserEntity"). UserEntityUpdate would need to use UserEntity setters/getters and would have 5 main functions (which gets data from 5 different system).
In case UserEntityUpdater does not extend UserEntity, then each of these functions would need reference of UserEntity object as input parameter, because function 4 does depend on result of function 1.
While not extending, getting values would be like: "$this->getUser()->getName()", where getUser is object that is stored as UserEntityUpdater's property. If I choose to extend, then I could use $this->getName(), which would make code cleaner, but it this practise doesn't actually share Entities logic - thus not a good practise. Any ideas/suggestions?
Also there is possibility of declaring $user before functions calling and give $user as reference input parameter and getting values in functions like $user->getName(). I believe this looks silly as input same input parameter is used for all 5 functions.
@R.P Have you considered calling $user->changeName($name);, then passing that user to $userRepository->update($user); which figures out the changes internally?
Thanks for the question @Jimbo , I now realized how bad the description is. Actually UserEntityUpdater's point won't only be updating the entity itself, but also perform insert/delete for other tables that are "connected" to UserEntity. For example there is no data change done in function 2, but getters are used for if conditions.
`catch(PDOException $e){ throw new Exception("Error In INSERT STATMENT: " . $e->getMessage()); }` there is nothing that beginners can understand less than exceptions :) doing this is not helping you in any way. you are telling to the consumer that the error is generic, rather than specifying that it's about a database problem
You're saying that Child is-a Father. If you want has-a relationship, use composition instead of inheritance. class Father { public function __construct(Child $child) { $this->child = $child; } }
@R.P not really, the repository collects objects that fetched from the data mapper(s) (which contain the SQL), and offers functions for (or directs) their persistence
@samayo I am not sure we have the same definition of "clutter"
also, if you insist on using suffixes, be consistent
namespace ApplicationNamespace\HttpNamespace;
class RequestClass implements AcceptableInterface {
public initFunction () {
if ($this->pageVariable) {
thrown new SomeException;
}
}
}
Anonymous
It does clutter the application though. It makes it hard to work with files, since all the redundant files are mixed with the application.
Bit of progress from yesterday. I have a nice factory taking in API data and popping out a nice api response object (one of a few different kinds). Is there a better way to then not just have a bunch of switch cases or if else statements to perform actions based on the type of response?
my concern is that it then makes the class have more than one job.. sortof. If it's only meant to effectively hold the data from the api response, would giving it a `process`-esque method give it more responsibility than it should have?