News Feed
Jobs Feed
Sections

Recent Jobs

News Archive
eZ Components:
Version 2008.2 Released
January 05, 2009 @ 12:52:42

The eZ Components project has release their latest stable version - 2008.2 - for public consumption today:

The development team is happy to announce the release of the seventh major version of eZ Components: version 2008.2. The main new development of this release is focused on the MvcTools (and accompanying) components.

The MvcTools component implements the tools for a framework, providing a dispatcher, request parsers, routing, view support and a response writer. Examples of its use can be found in the subversion repository for the project. You can see the full Changlog for the release here and you can download the latest release here.

0 comments voice your opinion now!
version release download changelog mvctools framework



Derick Rethans' Blog:
Five reasons why the shut-op operator (@) should be avoided
January 05, 2009 @ 12:09:37

Derick Rethans has posted just a few of the reasons why the "shut-up operator" (the @ symbol) should be avoided at all costs in your PHP applications.

The @-operator is often used to silence errors in noisy PHP functions'"functions that generate warnings that can not be easily prevented. [...] In those cases, there is no way how to check up-front whether the function call will not issue a warning when being called.

There are side effects to using the operator, however, including hiding legitimate errors and making debugging that much more difficult. To back up his point, he includes four other reasons to avoid the operator's use (besides the debugging issues):

  • It's slow (part 1)
  • It's slow (part 2)
  • It's slow (part 3: It generates crappier code)
  • Apfelstrudels were harmed (related to the strudel_token in the C code for the operator)
0 comments voice your opinion now!
shutup operator atsign avoid reason slow debugging error hide


Michelangelo van Dam's Blog:
Mapping Seven Things
January 05, 2009 @ 11:17:14

Since the Seven Things meme has been charging its way through the members of the PHP community (and some outside it), it's hard to keep track of who is tagging who and if those people have posted their "seven things" and tagged others. Michelangelo van Dam has tried to make things easier with his "Who Tagged Who" map mini-application that crawls through the posts looking for others who were tagged.

Trying to get a bit of overview of all people who have put up their "Seven Things" list, I created a little map that shows who tagged who with an overview of the most tagged persons.

You can also grab the XML source file if you'd like to manipulate it yourself.

0 comments voice your opinion now!
map seventhings blog tagged xml source dynamic


Ian Selby's Blog:
Dynamically Add Functions to PHP Classes
January 05, 2009 @ 10:26:50

Ian Selby has posted a new tutorial today looking at something that can be very handy in the right situations - dynamically adding new functions to an already defined PHP class.

I've gotten a lot of great suggestions for features [for PHP Thumbnailer], and have wanted to add them, but at the same time don't as I would prefer not to bloat the class with all sorts of functionality. So I started thinking about how I could provide certain functionality for people that want it, without either simply making it a part of the class (and making it more bloated as a result), or coming up with all sorts of extended classes to maintain and distribute.

His solution was to add functionality dynamically to the class as plugins. Each plugin is defined as its own class (to keep things standardized) and will be included/executed by a base controller class. He includes some sample code showing how to create a basic user object that can store the first and last names of the user in question.

0 comments voice your opinion now!
dynamic add function method class plugin tutorial user


Sameer Borate's Blog:
Refactoring 1 Consolidating Conditional Expressions
January 05, 2009 @ 09:31:08

Sameer has posted the first article in his "Refactoring" series today - a look at boiling down conditional expressions to only the logic that are really needed (and maybe replacing it all together).

Many times you see a group of conditionals where the returned values are the same. To make the code cleaner you can group the conditionals together using the '&&' or the '||' operators and then extract the code into a separate function. This also has the added benefit that you can reuse the extracted method in other places where the required conditional goes.

He shows how abstracting out a file upload permissions check to another function makes it easier to reuse and simpler to understand (an "if" versus multiple "return" statements).

0 comments voice your opinion now!
refactor code conditional consolidate series


Chris Hartjes' Blog:
CakePHP Mythbusters!
January 05, 2009 @ 08:47:16

In an effort to dispel some of the rumors and myths around the CakePHP framework (as presented most recently by a different blogger) Chris Hartjes has made a new "mythbuster" post to his blog today with a rebuttal to the points from the other article.

I ran across an article comparing CakePHP and Symfony and found that the writer had a number of preconceived ideas about CakePHP. These same ideas keep popping up everywhere, used by people looking to get their hate on about CakePHP. I sent a very well-reasoned email to the writer clearing up some of those misconceptions [...] So, in the interest of clarifying things about CakePHP I thought I would share that email, slightly rewritten for this blog posting, but the content is roughly the same.

The post/email covers a few different topics some might have misconceptions about concerning the framework:

  • Lack of Documentation
  • Scaffolding
  • Models are tied to controllers in a 1:1 relationship
  • Cake's Ajax and Javascript helpers do not support graceful degradation
  • Cake's HTML and Form helpers produces bad markup
  • Unit tests are an afterthought
  • CakePHP is not an "enterprise capable framework"
0 comments voice your opinion now!
cakephp framework mythbuster myth rumor unittest documentation scafffold


PHPImpact Blog:
Running PHP with Quercus in Jetty Web Server
January 05, 2009 @ 07:52:28

The PHP::Impact blog has a new post looking at how to run PHP on a Jetty (Java) web server using Quercus.

Tomcat and Jetty are very similar. Jetty can be invoked and installed as a stand alone application server. It has a flexible component based architecture that allows it to be easily deployed and integrated in a diverse range of instances. The project is supported by a growing community. The Jetty team has a history of being responsive to innovations and changing requirements.

They walk you through the "quick install" version of Jetty, getting it running, installing Quercus and configuring the Jetty web server to work with it.

0 comments voice your opinion now!
jetty java webserver quercus tutorial install configure



Community News:
Seven Things
January 03, 2009 @ 12:41:45

Ever wanted to know more about the individuals in the PHP community around you? You're in luck! The "Seven Things" meme has been zipping its way through the PHP community with some great results. I've tried to get together a list of the posts made so far - it's not going to get them all, but its a start. Those linked in the top list are ones tagged and with a blog post. The normal list at the bottom are those that are tagged but haven't gotten around to writing their Things:

And here's the slackers:

  • Joe LeBlanc
  • Paul Reinheimer
  • Ed Finkler
  • Greg Beaver
  • Sean Coates
  • Bill Karwin
  • Terry Chay
  • Chris Shiflett
  • Aaron Wormus
  • Michael Kimsal
  • Laura Thomson
  • Graham Christensen
  • Nate Abele
  • Ligaya Turmelle
  • Lukas Smith
  • Max Horvath
  • Johanna Cherry
  • Beth Tucker
  • Zac Greant
  • Helgi Þormar Þorbjörnsson
  • Brandon Savage
  • Marc de Visser
  • Joe Stagner
  • Christian Flickinger
  • Ralph Schindler
  • Wil Sinclair
  • Barry Austin
  • FoxyDot
  • Eric David
  • Timothy Boronczyk
  • Jan Lehnard
  • Pierre-Alain Joye
  • John Coggeshall
  • Stas Malyshev
  • Christopher Jones
  • Gaylord Aulke
  • David Coallier
  • Joe Stump
  • Josh Eichorn
  • Ken Guest
  • Harry Fuecks
  • Jeff Moore
  • Maggie Nelson

If you're one of the ones that hasn't posted yet and you get around to it or if I've left someone's post out of the list, let me know and I'll update the list.

0 comments voice your opinion now!
seven things list community interesting


Lorna Mitchell's Blog:
Book Review RESTful PHP
January 02, 2009 @ 16:25:02

Lorna Mitchell has posted a review she's done of the Packt Publishing book "RESTful PHP Web Services" (by Samisa Abeysinghe).

Overall it was well-written (with only as many spelling mistakes as any other PHP book) and clearly organised. [...] Very few services that claim to be RESTful actually are, which makes writing anything along these lines very tricky, however I did feel the author could have been clearer about why having a single URL and a parameter for which action should be performed, doesn't fit well. We do get a sense of excitement about services as ways to "glue together" bits of data on the net, and the possibilities of exposing and consuming information in this way.

She talks about the quality of the technical content (including the "very thorough" non-framework examples and Zend Framework example) and some of the extra baggage she felt it could do without - specifically the overhead that adding the Zend Framework could add.

0 comments voice your opinion now!
rest book review packt publishing zendframework



Community Events









Don't see your event here?
Let us know!


framework example security package PEAR zendframework ajax job release cakephp mysql releases code conference book developer application database zend PHP5

All content copyright, 2009 PHPDeveloper.org :: info@phpdeveloper.org - Powered by the Solar PHP Framework