@Jack lets say its a json request to insert a user. Lets assume username was taken, password wasn't secure, and email did not contain a valid domain or something.
I want to avoid reporting a error for username, then when fixed they find out their password is wrong, then went fixed they find out their email format is wrong, etc.
@Jack , what about returning errors to the user? I should say this doesn't just apply to updatePassword, but lets say we want to update a set of properties. I want to avoid the scenario of returning single errors at a table, and give a reason why a entire property update can't be applied. Lets say they entered the username, password, and email wrong.
@Jack , I have been reading much about a service layer and it seems like the right way to go. I am still interested in getting errors about the data before applying it to a model, so I can return the info back to the model. Was thinking about creating a isValid($data) function for each model which does just that... returns a list of error codes
@Jack Perfect example is updating a user password. Lets say theres 3 pages that can do this, registration, forgot password? link, and mabey settings panel of user. Lets say you implement some RESTful api that can be used to update a password too. I generally just use my models as a data container, maybe doing some rudiment things such as encrypting a password if using setPassword(), but I've always kept validation out of my model classes, and had a seperate classed use for validating input.
Jack: More of just using annotations. It wouldn't be proper to define join points and whatnot. I ran into the issue before where I have repeated validation logic in multiple places to update the same property and am trying to avoid it.
Anyone implement a JSON and MVC service consumer side-by-side? I would like to abstract a service layer out of my code and have both consumers use the layer..but its hard for data matching.
so the object at certain part as an array of callbacks, and when its time to fire the callback, it just loops over the array and executes each function
@billmalarky if used properly, yes. Sometimes they are necessary in event based systems. For ex, you give a function and you only want the function to run if a certain event happens
@billmalarky simple example is the array_map function, you give a function and it applies a new array with each element being the supplied callback applied to the original element
Anyone implement a domain/service layer in php, which used by a MVC and Json-RPC consumer? I want to create a service to calculate an item code based on a models attributes. I think passing a instance of the model to the function is reasonable, but what would you do for javascript? Automatically convert the object to a php model?