First off, I am relatively new to OOP as well as using an MVC, so I apologize if I do not use the right terminology or if I seem confused (because I am, haha)
I will start this off as basic as possible and if you need more information please let me know.
I am using Panique's MVC (Version HUGE)
https://github.com/panique/huge
So here goes nothing!
I have a base controller class that is setup like this...
Controller
<?php
class Controller {
public $View;
function __construct() {
$this->View = new View();
}
}
?>
With some extended controller classes like this (I will show two here)
IndexController
class IndexController extends Controller {
public function __construct() {
parent::__construct();
}
public function index() {
$this->View->render('index');
}
}
?>
ProfileController
class ProfileController extends Controller {
public function __construct() {
parent::__construct();
}
public function profile() {
$this->View->render('profile');
}
}
?>
My Question is, what does it take (if at all possible) to use an extended class method within another extended class method when both have the same parent class. Something Like...
<?php
class ProfileController extends Controller {
public function __construct() {
parent::__construct();
}
public function profile() {
$this->IndexController->index(); //Here I would like to use the method from the IndexController
}
}
?>
I have tried many of attempts to make this work but I think my lack of knowledge using OOP is hindering me. It seems that most everything I try except for a few cases, throws an error of...
Fatal error: Class 'IndexController' not found in blah/blah/ProfileController.php
I think if I could learn to target the extended class the right way I could manage the rest...hopefully ;)
There's no easy or elegant way to do that. You would need to instantiate the other class inside the class that needs to borrow the code, and that would probably cause many side effects in your app.
There may be other ways to do that, and that also depends on the possibilities / limitations of the framework, but thinking from the perspective of OOP in PHP, ignoring other factors, the best approach would be to implement the shared code in a method on Controller class:
<?php
class Controller {
public $View;
function __construct() {
$this->View = new View();
}
protected function myCustomCode() {
...
}
}
?>
And then call it normally on descendents:
<?php
class IndexController extends Controller {
public function __construct() {
parent::__construct();
}
public static function index() {
$this->myCustomCode();
$this->View->render('index');
}
}
?>
<?php
class ProfileController extends Controller {
public function __construct() {
parent::__construct();
}
public function profile() {
$this->myCustomCode();
...whatever...
}
}
?>
I don't see a better way of doing that. Besides, this is the natural way of OOP, where common stuff is up on class hierarchy (ancestors), never sideways or down (descendents). That helps keeping your code logical and easier to maintain.
Include the file of the class IndexController:
require_once('IndexController.php');
$this->controller = new IndexController();
Then invoke the method
$this->IndexController->index();
Related
I have multiple controllers, with multiple methods, which all return views.
class PageController extends Controller {
public function index()
{
// do lots of stuff
return view('view.name', $lotsOfStuffArray);
}
public function list()
{
//...and so on
}
I now have the need to create an API, which performs much of the same logic as the methods above, but returns a JSON output instead:
class PageApiController extends Controller {
public function index()
{
// do lots of the same stuff
return $lotsOfStuffCollection;
}
public function list()
{
//...and so on
}
What is the best way to accomplish this without having to copy and paste code from one controller to the other?
I've tried placing a lot of the logic into traits and using them in my Eloquent models, but that still requires that I copy and paste code from controller to controller. I should also note its not viable to check expectsJson() and return a response accordingly as I have many, many methods.
Is it a good idea to have the logic stored in a parent class and then create a child controller that responds with a view and a child controller that responds with JSON?
You could abstract the logic to a service class. I have answered a similar question.
You have PageController, PageAPIController and PageService.
class PageService {
public function doStuff()
{
return $stuff;
}
}
class PageController extends Controller {
public function index()
{
$service = new PageService();
$stuff = $service->doStuff();
return $stuff;
}
}
class PageAPIController extends Controller {
public function index()
{
$service = new PageService();
$stuff = $service->doStuff();
return $stuff->toJSON();
}
protected function toJSON(){
//You could also abstract that to a service or a trait.
}
}
I am new into Phalcon framework. I just got the basic idea about it. Every controller has methods with multiple specific actions. I wrote a huge indexAction method but now I want to break it down with multiple private method so that I can reuse those functionality. But when I try to create any method without action suffix, it returns error(Page Not Found). How can I break it down into multiple methods?
<?php
use Phalcon\Mvc\Controller;
class PostsController extends Controller
{
public function indexAction()
{
$this->someMethod();
}
public function someMethod()
{
//do your things
}
}
Controllers must have the suffix “Controller” while actions the suffix “Action”. A sample of a controller is as follows:
<?php
use Phalcon\Mvc\Controller;
class PostsController extends Controller
{
public function indexAction()
{
}
public function showAction($year, $postTitle)
{
}
}
For calling another method, you would use it straight forward
<?php
use Phalcon\Mvc\Controller;
class PostsController extends Controller
{
public function indexAction()
{
echo $this->showAction();
}
private function showAction()
{
return "show";
}
}
Docs.
What exactly do you want? The answer seems trivial to me.
class YourController extends Phalcon\Mvc\Controller
{
// this method can be called externally because it has the "Action" suffix
public function indexAction()
{
$this->customStuff('value');
$this->more();
}
// this method is only used inside this controller
private function customStuff($parameter)
{
}
private function more()
{
}
}
i am trying to use $admin->function() instead $this->admin_model->function()
when i tried to declare a variable $admin=new Admin_model; in constructor and use it in other functions it gives error..
my code is given below, i don't know much about OOP concept, somebody please help.
class Admin extends CI_Controller {
var $admin;
function __construct() {
parent::__construct();
$this->load->model('admin_model');
$admin=new Admin_model;
}
public function index($value='')
{
if(!$admin->is_admin_logged_in()){
redirect('admin/login?r='.urlencode(current_url()));
}
$data['loggedin']=TRUE;
$data['account']=$this->session->all_userdata();
$this->load->view('pages/admin-home',isset($data)?$data:NULL);
}
}
presently i am using this method
public function login()// this function belongs to the same controller mentioned above
{
$r=isset($_GET['r'])?urldecode($_GET['r']):'admin';
$admin=new Admin_model;
if($admin->is_admin_logged_in()) redirect($r);
}
i don't want declare $admin=new Admin_model; in every single function and want to make the code look good and clean, so don't like to use $this->admin or $this->admin_model either.
You are trying to give an alias to a model (as what I can see)
All you have to do is:
class Admin extends CI_Controller {
function __construct() {
parent::__construct();
$this->load->model('admin_model', 'admin');
}
public function index($value='')
{
if(!$this->admin->is_admin_logged_in()){
redirect('admin/login?r='.urlencode(current_url()));
}
$data['loggedin']=TRUE;
$data['account']=$this->session->all_userdata();
$this->load->view('pages/admin-home',isset($data)?$data:NULL);
}
}
Notice where the alias of the model is given
$this->load->model('admin_model', 'admin');
And how it is used
if(!$this->admin->is_admin_logged_in()){
I'm new on Laravel 4 and I am trying to understand it.
is searched on google and on stackoverflow. Maybe i am not searching for the right syntax but i hope someone can help me, with it.
In CodeIgniter i understand it (probably). There I use in an Controller:
function __construct()
{ $this->load->model('example_m'); }
But how about in Laravel 4?
I figured out the following:
i make a static function in de model so i can access it everywhere. Example:
class Example extends Eloquent // this is the model
{
public static function TestExample(){
// do some stuff here
}
}
Or i could do it like this:
class ExampleController extends BaseController
{
public $test = null;
public function __construct()
{
$this->test = new Example();
}
public function index()
{
$this->test->TestExample();
}
}
My question is: Is there an other way and/or what is the correct way?
http://four.laravel.com/docs/ioc
App::bind('ExampleModelInterface', 'Example');
class ExampleController extends BaseController {
public function __construct(ExampleModelInterface $model)
{
$this->model = $model;
}
}
Do you mean simply accessing the method of a model?
Since they are static you use: Modell::method()
You might have to do a composer dump-autoload though so L4 autoloads it correctly.
I have the following controller:
class Tests extends CI_Controller {
public function update_record_test()
{
//some methods
}
}
?>
But I need to execute Method1 method from Controller1 controller. How can I do it?
There's not much information here, or I may be missing something, but what's wrong with
class Tests extends CI_Controller {
public function update_record_test()
{
$controller1 = new Controller1();
$controller1->Method1();
}
}
If you mean you want to execute a function of your main class CI_CONTROLLER, try this.
parent::Method1();
Check the http://php.net/manual/en/keyword.extends.php for more examples