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16:21
@Leigh sorry to ping you from this room. I read a bit more about objects, and it gave me an idea. Could I write my SendMail.php class as a superclass, and then write a subclass, PearMail.php, that extends SendMail.php? SendMail.php would mostly have empty methods/properties. Is this a good/common practice?
No worries, whats up?
You could SendMail extends \Mail, sure. Is that what you meant?
I mean writing SendMail as, I think, interface?
Oh right, well you could write an interface, but (I think) it's generally only good practice when you know there will be more than one implementor
it would have abstract methods that are not associated with PEAR Mail, and then I could write another class that extends SendMail that would either override methods with PearMail specific properties/methods
If there was several Mail implementations you wanted to be able to swap out on a whim, having an interface declaring what they have to implement is a good idea.
Again if there is only a single implementation, not much point to writing half/partial implementations in an abstract class
If that functionality was to be shared between two other classes, arguably it has more use
16:25
Right now, PEAR mail is tightly integrated into our codebase, so I wouldn't be able to get rid of it. But anytime I bring up PEAR mail in room 11, PeeHaa comments that I should use a different mailer plugin, which I'm not opposed to, but it would only work with my future code.
Ok, so in this case an interface would help, if you were able to replace everywhere that used Pear Mail with something that used the interface, you could develop your new mailer against the same interface
and when the time comes, swap them over
without having to change everywhere that uses Mail
But it only matters if it would save me time later on. I'm not sure I'll have any intention of decoupling the code base from PEAR Mail. I still need ot find the time to test it against newer versions of PHP.
And hopefully, hopefully, hopefully, we can put out a RFP this year for redesigning our website, including a new codebase/back-end system.
Funny how lackluster a codebase becomes after five years. 😃 Code grows stagnate if not constantly maintained.
Same story everywhere, overworked devs who need to deliver now
code quality suffers
This is why so much open source is "good code" and so much private code is terrible. Private code is not a labour of love
17:32
The unfortunate reality for my job is that I have about four different duties in one: front-end dev, back-end dev, devops and web content trainer. I'm rarely given an opportunity to improve my development skills because I'm juggling other shit.
e.g. this morning I was planning to continue working on the class I'm writing. I had about five different emails come in with either questions, requests, or notifying a vendor of a recent change to one our services. I love my job, but I also hate it.
My supervisor doesn't understand that being front-end dev, back-end dev and devops each require diligent effort to be effective. Because the title is "web administrator," I'm expected to be able to do all, because that's how the job has always been.

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