with table i meant form.. :)
Am Mittwoch, 14. Mai 2014 12:08:28 UTC+2 schrieb euromark: > > I am not quite sure why you are making this into your own science project > :) > it is fairly simple actually > > have an "id" field in your table => edit => PUT > dont have an "id" field in your table => add => POST > > That's documented - and exactly as easy and straightforward as it sounds > > If you don't care about PUT/POST in your actions, you can indeed just > check for both (as I have always done so far): > > if ($this->request->is(array('post', 'put')) {} > > This works for all edit and add actions. Always. > > Done in a few seconds.. :) > > > > Am Mittwoch, 14. Mai 2014 02:09:51 UTC+2 schrieb Reuben: >> >> So, having decided to always specify the action is the Form::create, so I >> can only be concerns with detecting a POST for form submissions, I'd really >> like to make sure that is covered in my unit testing. >> >> But that's a tricky one. >> >> I guess I would need to write a unit test for any view that has a form, >> and mock the FormHelper to expect that any create() had an array with an >> action entry to specify the expected action. Writing unit tests for views >> is generally frowned on, so much so, that an example of how to do this is >> not given in the doco. >> >> If the issue holds my attention long enough, I'll post back. >> > -- Like Us on FaceBook https://www.facebook.com/CakePHP Find us on Twitter http://twitter.com/CakePHP --- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "CakePHP" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to cake-php+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. To post to this group, send email to cake-php@googlegroups.com. Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/cake-php. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.