2.1 KiB
Composer
Just because you are not using a framework does not mean you will have to reinvent the wheel every time you want to do something. For PHP there is a dependency manager called composer that you can use to pull in 3rd party packages for your application.
If you don't have composer installed already, head over to the website and install it. You can find composer packages for your project on packagist.
Create a new file in your project root folder called composer.json
. This is the composer configuration file that will be used to configure your project and it's dependencies. It must be valid json or composer will fail.
Add the following content to the file:
{
"name": "Project name",
"description": "Your project description",
"keywords": ["Your keyword", "Another keyword"],
"license": "MIT",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Your Name",
"email": "your@email.com",
"role": "Creator / Main Developer"
}
],
"require": {
"php": ">=5.5.0"
},
"autoload": {
"psr-4": {
"Example\\": "src/"
}
}
}
In the autoload part you can see that I am using the Example
namespace for the project. You can use whatever fits your project there, but from now on I will always use the Example
namespace in my examples. Just replace it with your namespace in your own code.
Open a new console window and navigate into your project root folder. There run composer update
.
Composer creates a composer.lock
file that locks in your dependencies and a vendor directory. To remove those from your git repository, add a new file in your project root folder called .gitignore
with the following content:
composer.lock
vendor/
This will exclude the included file and folder from your commits. For which would be a good time now by the way.
Now you have successfully created an empty playground which you can use to set up your project.