Posts Tagged ‘zend framework’

Zend Framework and the Twitter API

Monday, October 13th, 2008

I wanted my new job website to post a tweet to twitter every time we approved a posting.

Zend_Service_Twitter looks like it will be fairly comprehensive, but it’s not in the core yet and is probably a little overkill for my simple use case.

I then had a look at Zend_Rest_Client, which seemed to confuse me. I couldn’t actually get it to add the parameters I wanted to the call, I guess it’s better for interacting with Zend_Rest_Server or fully restful APIs.

To be fair, the manual actually states:

[Warning] Strictness of Zend_Rest_Client

Any REST service that is strict about the arguments it receives will likely fail using Zend_Rest_Client, because of the behavior described above. This is not a common practice and should not cause problems.

So here’s some simple code using Zend_Http_Client.

< ?php
require_once 'Zend/Http/Client.php';

$http = new Zend_Http_Client('http://twitter.com/statuses/update.xml', array(
    'maxredirects' => 0,
    'timeout'      => 10,
));

$http->setAuth(
    'twitter_username',
    'twitter_password',
     Zend_Http_Client::AUTH_BASIC
);

$http->setMethod(Zend_Http_Client::POST);
$http->setParameterPost('status', 'Your status message');
$http->request();

?>

PHPPositions – Genuine PHP jobs at Genuine Companies

Monday, September 29th, 2008

PHPPositions UK is a simple job board, listing genuine PHP jobs, for genuine companies. No agencies.

I needed a little project to help get to grips with the Zend Framework, so I created a little job board specifically targetted at PHP jobs in the UK. It’s not finished yet, but it’s good enough to put up on the web.

Check it out, if you’re in the UK and on the lookout for positions, subscribe to the feed. Eventually I’d like to monetise the site, but that depends on it generating a large enough audience, so until that point I’ll be adding jobs manually, thus keeping up a fairly high standard of jobs on there.


Fat Models and the Data Access Layer

Tuesday, June 17th, 2008

There’s been some discussion recently on why active record:

  1. Sucks
  2. Sucks – but not like that;
  3. Doesn’t suck

I like the active record pattern, so I don’t think it sucks, but I do think it’s used a little out of context sometimes.

If you’re building a small lightweight app, then I think using your Data access layer as the M in MVC is a logical thing to do. It’s quick, it’s easy and you can extend either your active record in Rails, or extend your Table DataGateway in the Zend Framework and you wont go far wrong.

As soon as your app gets a little more complex, you might want to start creating custom
models that contain more business logic than simply pulling and pushing to the database. If your application is complex enough, chances are your model will need to interact with more than one database table, if not database, so at this point, like Bill Karwin pointed out, your model should be using the DAL, not being the DAL. Loosening the coupling between model and DAL, should also help with automated testing the business logic, in that mock objects could replace the DAL.

The only problem is, I don’t know the best way to do it.

I’m currently learning the ways of the Zend Framework and would be interested to see how people think the best way to implement this kind of complex model. I’m currently leaning toward something like this. I’ve included a Zend_Form object, to show how the Persons model encapsulates more logic than just pushing to and from the database. I think the biggest benefit of Zend_Form is validating input, which I consider domain logic, so should be part of the model. But I’m not sure the best way to make things easily testable, without pushing into the realms of fancy Dependency Injection and what not, which I’m not all that familiar with.

File: application/models/Persons.php

<?php

class Persons
{
    public function findByEmail($email)
    {
        $table  = self::getTable();
        $select = $table->select()
                        ->where('email = ?', $email);
        return $table->fetchAll($select);
    }

    public static function getTable()
    {
        // add some dependency injection?
        return new Persons_Table();
    }   

    public static function getForm()
    {
        // add some dependency injection?
        return new Persons_Form();
    }

    // ...
}

File: application/models/Persons/Table.php

<?php

class Persons_Table extends Zend_Db_Table
{
    protected $_name = 'persons';

    // ...
}

File: application/models/Persons/Form.php

<?php

class Persons_Form extends Zend_Form
{
    // ...
}

At first it may seem that the Persons model just ends up acting as a proxy to the Persons_Form and Persons_Table, but once you start writing methods that use both together, you’ll start seeing fatter models and thin controllers, which is all good.

This really is a request for comments really, as I’m personally not sure about the best way to go about this. Would be interesting if any of the people using the MVC part of the Zend Framework in the real world go about this?

Framework Popularity/Favouritism/Biase …

Monday, April 28th, 2008

Started writing this post over a week ago, kind of lost interest, but I polished it off…

After reading a couple of posts this week arguing the corner of both Ruby on Rails and Symfony, I found myself thinking about which framework I like the most. I came to the conclusion that I don’t really have a favourite, just the one I’m currently using. I’ve used the two previously mentioned frameworks, CakePHP a long time ago and more recently the Zend Framework. I like them all. They all do similar things, sometimes in different ways, but having spent a lot of time maintaining and developing ‘frameworkless’ sites, I think they’re all mega. Admittedly, my PHP is far stronger than my Ruby, so I steer towards the PHP ones, but that has nothing to do with the frameworks themselves.

Anyway, this lead me to have a little look on Google Trends, to see how many people are searching for what on the framework front, I included the previously mentioned four and Django, which is very popular, but my Python is worse than my Ruby, so I’ve not used it. I know this is hardly conclusive, but it was worth a look.

The results are pretty much what I expected. Django looks like it’s a more common search term, but is starting to rise recently. Zend, CakePHP and Symfony are all slowly on the up, whereas Rails clearly had a big boom over the previous two years and is now settling down a bit.

Google Trends for Frameworks

Contributing to Open Source Software

Thursday, April 3rd, 2008

I’m a big fan of Open Source Software. Although I’m sure I could get by if I had to move to proprietary based software, at the present time, open source software earns me a living. Because of this, at the start of the year, I decided to give something back and start contributing to open source. I chose the Zend Framework, because it is written in PHP and is a project I have a lot of interest in. I registered for an account on the bug tracker and signed the CLA, but that’s as far as I got. I started looking through some of the bugs available for fixing, but found that the simpler ones were being dealt with quickly by other people and the only ones left where a little too complex for me. I still plan to contribute before the year is over. I intend to use the framework for a project I have in mind and the frameworks current implementation of a client for Amazon Web Services needs adding to for the purposes I need, so maybe I can contribute that way.

Back to the point, today I think I found a bug in PHPUnit, I couldn’t work out how to submit a bug report via the website, so I emailed Sebastian Bergmann with a patch. I’m not going to describe the bug until I know for sure that I’m correct, but I’m at least 90% sure I’m in the right. So, if I am right, that’s my first solid contribution to open source software.

Update

Well it seems I was right in reporting the bug, but it appears Sebastian didn’t like the patch I sent, or more likely it didn’t work. This changeset looks slightly different to the patch I submitted.

Index: PHPUnit/Util/Metrics/Function.php
===================================================================
--- PHPUnit/Util/Metrics/Function.php   (revision 2707)
+++ PHPUnit/Util/Metrics/Function.php   (working copy)
@@ -449,7 +449,7 @@
         }

         else {
-            $this->crap = pow($this->ccn, 2) * (pow(1 - $this->coverage/100, 3) + $this->ccn);
+            $this->crap = pow($this->ccn, 2) * pow(1 - $this->coverage/100, 3) + $this->ccn;
         }
     }

From what I can tell, the change put into place is also incorrect according to the C.R.A.P. index formula.

Update 2

I emailed Sebastian and he fixed it properly in changeset 2712