Don't know if this helps, but one thing I continue to do is download and install and
tinker with is other peoples code. Lot's of different styles, and solutions, some
that stand out more to me than others, so I steal the good ones until they fail me,
then replace them with others. One thing that seems to work well for me now, is
conditional includes;
switch($_GET["op"]) {
case "editpage":
include "modules/edit.php";
break;
case "updatepost":
include "modules/update.php"
break;
....
}
A good example of this style of coding is found in PHPNuke;
http://phpnuke.org/
If you like object coding check out;
http://www.phpclasses.org/
Other sources of code;
http://sourceforge.net/
http://www.hotscripts.com/PHP/Scripts_and_Programs/index.html
you will find something eventually, good luck,
Warren Vail
-----Original Message-----
From: Chris [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, September 29, 2003 2:50 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [PHP] Cleaning up my messy code
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Warren Vail) wrote in
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]:
> My own experience has shown that separation of a presentation layer
> from an application layer, doesn't occur where we think it should.
> HTML as a language has no capability to be dynamic, and if we are
> going to ask that the page be dynamic, we are going to need to make
> sure we don't attempt to split layers along language boundaries.
> JavaScript, as we typically use it, adds some dynamic nature to our
> pages, but often is not based on database content. This is where PHP
> comes in and the split becomes more vague. If what the user sees, is
> controlled by database content, then splitting presentation and
> application layers becomes a frustrating exercise in theoretical
> purity, that often adds to response times of applications.
Certainly. This is not a theoretical exercise but frustration with
dealing with my own code, trying to implement revisions, and basically
feeling like I need a map of some kind to know where I am.
That's why I'm interested in what other people really do rather than
theoretical models they think might be the "purest." And it isn't just
code and content separation, which isn't always practical as an
absolute, but code separation. If I have a simple set of actions to
perform, say a series of functions to enter data into a db, review the
entry, edit the entry, etc. how can I organize my code so it is easy to
maintain and so some things can be reused? Objects? Functions? Fuses?
Switches? All of these have their adherents... I'm trying to find one
that adheres to me-- i.e. that is usable without being so extensive and
abstract that I spend more time trying to learn how to fit the framework
than actually getting something done...
c
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