fix typos in chapters 15 to 17
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3 changed files with 31 additions and 31 deletions
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@ -2,7 +2,7 @@
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### Adding Content
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By now we did not really display anything but some examples to in our application and it is now time to make our app
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By now we did not really display anything but some examples to in our application, and it is now time to make our app
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display some content. For example we could our app be able to display the Markdown files used in this tutorial as
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nicely rendered HTML Pages that can be viewed in the browser instead of the editor you are using.
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@ -15,7 +15,7 @@ can use whatever you like.
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After installing Parsedown lets write a Markdownparser interface and an implementation using parsedown.
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We only need one function that receives a string of Markdown and returns the HTML represantion (as a string as well).
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We only need one function that receives a string of Markdown and returns the HTML representation (as a string as well).
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@ -30,8 +30,8 @@ interface MarkdownParser
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}
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```
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By the namespace you will already have guessed that I called placed in interface in a file calles MarkdownParser.php in
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the src/Template folder. Lets put our Parsedown implementation right next to it in a file called ParsedownParser.php
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By the namespace you will already have guessed that I placed in interface in a file calles MarkdownParser.php in
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the src/Template folder. Let's put our Parsedown implementation right next to it in a file called ParsedownParser.php
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```php
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<?php declare(strict_types=1);
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@ -55,7 +55,7 @@ final class ParsedownRenderer implements MarkdownParser
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We could now use the ParsedownRender class directly in our actions by typehinting the classname as an argument to the
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constructor or a method, but as we always want to rely on an interface instead of an implementation we need to define
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the the ParsedownRenderer as the correct implementation for the MarkdownRenderer interface in the dependencies file:
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the ParsedownRenderer as the correct implementation for the MarkdownRenderer interface in the dependencies file:
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```php
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...
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@ -129,10 +129,10 @@ those are simply displayed using an unordered list.
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The second templates displays a single rendered markdown page. As data it expects the title and the content as array.
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I used an extra bracket for the content ```{{{content}}}``` so that the Mustache-Renderer does not escape the provided
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html and thereby destroys the the parsed markdown.
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html and thereby destroys the parsed markdown.
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You might have spotted that I added [Pico.css](https://picocss.com/) which is just a very small css framework to make the
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pages a little bit nicer to look at. It mostly provides some typography styles that work great with rendered Markdown,
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pages a little nicer to look at. It mostly provides some typography styles that work great with rendered Markdown,
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but you can leave that out or use any other css framework you like. There is also some Javascript that adds syntax
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highlighting to the code.
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@ -145,7 +145,7 @@ function show(string $name): \Psr\Http\Message\ResponseInterface;
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function list(): \Psr\Http\Message\ResponseInterface;
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```
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Lets define two routes. `/page` should display the overview of all pages, and if the add the name of chapter to the
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Let's define two routes. `/page` should display the overview of all pages, and if the add the name of chapter to the
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route, `/page/adding-content` for example, the show action should be called with the name as a variable:
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`config/routes.php`
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@ -154,7 +154,7 @@ $r->addRoute('GET', '/page', [Page::class, 'list']);
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$r->addRoute('GET', '/page/{page}', [Page::class, 'show']);
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```
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Here is my Implementation. If have added a little regex replacement in the show method that replaces the links to the
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Here is my Implementation. I have added a little regex replacement in the show method that replaces the links to the
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next and previous chapter so that it works with our routing configuration.
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`src/Action/Page.php`
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@ -244,9 +244,9 @@ class Page
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You can now navigate your Browser to [localhost:1235/page][http://localhost:1235/page] and try out if everything works.
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Of course this code is far from looking good. We heavily rely on the pages being files in the filesystem, and the action
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should never be aware of the filesystem in the first place, also we have a lot of string replacements and other repetetive
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code in the file. And phpstan is gonna scream at us a lot, but if we rewrite the code to satisfy all the checks we would
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add even more lines to that simple class, so lets move on to the next chapter where we move all the logic to seperate
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should never be aware of the filesystem in the first place, also we have a lot of string replacements and other repetitive
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code in the file. And phpstan is going to scream at us a lot, but if we rewrite the code to satisfy all the checks we would
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add even more lines to that simple class, so lets move on to the next chapter where we move all the logic to separate
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classes following our holy SOLID principles :)
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@ -2,32 +2,32 @@
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## Data Repository
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At the end of the last chapter I mentioned being unhappy with our Pages action, because there is to much stuff happening
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there. We are firstly receiving some Arguments, then we are using those to query the filesytem for the given page,
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At the end of the last chapter I mentioned being unhappy with our Pages action, because there is too much stuff happening
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there. We are firstly receiving some Arguments, then we are using those to query the filesystem for the given page,
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loading the specific file from the filesystem, rendering the markdown, passing the markdown to the template renderer,
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adding the resulting html to the response and then returning the response.
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In order to make our pageaction independent from the filesystem and move the code that is responsible for reading the
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In order to make our page-action independent of the filesystem and move the code that is responsible for reading the
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files
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to a better place I want to introduce
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the [Repository Pattern](https://designpatternsphp.readthedocs.io/en/latest/More/Repository/README.html).
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I want to start by creating a class that represents the Data that is included in a page so that. For now I can spot
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I want to start by creating a class that represents the Data that is included in a page so that. For now, I can spot
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three
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distrinct attributes.
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distinct attributes.
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* the ID (or chapternumber)
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* the ID (or chapter-number)
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* the title (or name)
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* the content
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Currently all those properties are always available, but we might later be able to create new pages and store them, but
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Currently, all those properties are always available, but we might later be able to create new pages and store them, but
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at that point in time we are not yet aware of the new available ID, so we should leave that property nullable. This
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allows
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us to create an object without an id and let the code that actually saves the object to a persistant store define a
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us to create an object without an id and let the code that actually saves the object to a persistent store define a
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valid
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id on saving.
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Lets create an new Namespace called `Model` and put a `MarkdownPage.php` class in there:
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Let's create an new Namespace called `Model` and put a `MarkdownPage.php` class in there:
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```php
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<?php declare(strict_types=1);
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@ -48,7 +48,7 @@ class MarkdownPage
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These small Model classes are one of my most favorite features in newer PHP-Versions, because they are almost as easy
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to create as an on-the-fly array but give us the great benefit of type safety as well as full code completion in our
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IDEs.
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There is a [great blogpost](https://stitcher.io/blog/evolution-of-a-php-object) that highlights how these kind of
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There is a [great blogpost](https://stitcher.io/blog/evolution-of-a-php-object) that highlights how this kind of
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objects
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have evolved in PHP from version 5.6 to 8.1, as I personally first started writing proper php with 5.4 it really baffles
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me how far the language has evolved in these last years.
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@ -183,7 +183,7 @@ return new Settings(
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);
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```
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Of course we need to define the correct implementation for the container to choose when we are requesting the Repository
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Of course, we need to define the correct implementation for the container to choose when we are requesting the Repository
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interface:
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`conf/dependencies.php`
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@ -2,14 +2,14 @@
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## Autoloading performance
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Although our application is still very small and you should not really experience any performance issues right now,
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Although our application is still very small, and you should not really experience any performance issues right now,
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there are still some things we can already consider and take a look at. If I check the network tab in my browser it takes
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about 90-400ms to show a simple rendered markdownpage, with is sort of ok but in my opinion way to long as we are not
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about 90-400ms to show a simple rendered markdown, with is sort of ok but in my opinion way to long as we are not
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really doing anything and do not connect to any external services. Mostly we are just reading around 16 markdown files,
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a template, some config files here and there and parse some markdown. So that should not really take that long.
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The problem is, that we heavily rely on autoloading for all our class files, in the `src` folder. And there are also
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quite a lot of other files in composers `vendor` directory. To understand while this is becomming we should make
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The problem is, that we heavily rely on autoload for all our class files, in the `src` folder. And there are also
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quite a lot of other files in composers `vendor` directory. To understand while this is becoming we should make
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ourselves familiar with how [autoloading in php](https://www.php.net/manual/en/language.oop5.autoload.php) works.
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The basic idea is, that every class that php encounters has to be loaded from somewhere in the filesystem, we could
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@ -19,8 +19,8 @@ The problem we are now facing is that the composer autoloader has some rules to
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a class definition might be placed, then the autoloader tries to locate a file by the namespace and classname and if it
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exists includes that file.
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If we only have a handfull of classes that does not take a lot of time, but as we are growing with our application this
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easily takes longer than necesery, but fortunately composer has some options to speed up the class loading.
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If we only have a handful of classes that does not take a lot of time, but as we are growing with our application this
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easily takes longer than necessary, but fortunately composer has some options to speed up the class loading.
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Take a few minutes to read the documentation about [composer autoloader optimization](https://getcomposer.org/doc/articles/autoloader-optimization.md)
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@ -35,7 +35,7 @@ in your browsers devtools.
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In my case the response time falls down to under an average of 30ms with some spikes in between, but all in all it looks really good.
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You can also try out the different optimization levels and see if you can spot any differences.
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Although the composer manual states not to use the optimtization in a dev environment I personally have not encountered
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Although the composer manual states not to use the optimization in a dev environment I personally have not encountered
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any errors with the first level of optimizations, so we can use that level here. If you add the line from the documentation
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to your `composer.json` so that the autoloader gets optimized everytime we install new packages.
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