On 29.01.2007, at 22:22, Matthew Weier O'Phinney wrote:
-- Waldemar Schott <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote
(on Monday, 29 January 2007, 08:46 PM +0100):
I'm not sure, but i think you have to do this:
echo Zend_Controller_Front::run(YOUR_CONTROLLERS_PATH);
Just
Zend_Controller_Front::run($controllerDir);
No echo needed.
I've tried to figure out why it's not working for me just to run
Zend_Controller_Front::run($controllerDir); after defining new router.
That's library/Zend/Controller/Front.php, line 190
static public function run($controllerDirectory)
{
require_once 'Zend/Controller/Router.php';
$frontController = self::getInstance();
$frontController
->setControllerDirectory($controllerDirectory)
->setRouter(new Zend_Controller_Router())
->dispatch();
}
As I understood, when I'm calling Zend_Controller_Front::run
($controllerDir); after creating new route it's not use it and just
create a new (default) router:
->setRouter(new Zend_Controller_Router())
AFAIK the default behaviour is, that the dispatch() method only
returns
the output without echoing.
Default behaviour is to render the response from dispatch().
It's possible to call Zend_Controller_Front::returnResponse(true); or
something like this.
Doing this prevents dispatch() from rendering the response, and
returns
the response object, which you can then manipulate prior to rendering.
If you do this, you can't use run(), but must use dispatch() instead.
Dmity Sinev schrieb:
Hi!
You can do this by defining your own route for example like this:
$router = new Zend_Controller_RewriteRouter();
$router->addRoute(
'default',
new Zend_Controller_Router_Route(':action/:subnavi/',
array('controller' => 'YourDefaultController' , 'action' =>
'YourDefaultAction', 'subnavi' => 'YourDefaultSubnavi'))
);
$front->setRouter($router);
// Instead this 2 lines should be just
Zend_Controller_Front::run(PATH_YOUR_CONTROLLERS), but it's not
working why?
$front->setControllerDirectory(PATH_YOUR_CONTROLLERS);
$front->dispatch();
Now, when you request this url http://www.example.org/mainnavi/
subnavi
you will get:
controller = YourDefaultController
action = mainnavi
subnavi = subnavi
This approach is suitable only for very small sites...
For more information please read this:
http://framework.zend.com/manual/en/
zend.controller.providedsubclasses.html#zend.controller.providedsubc
lasses.rewriterouter
On 29.01.2007, at 17:37, Ivan Ruiz Gallego wrote:
Hello,
This is my very simple question:
I would like to route URL's like
"http://www.example.org/mainnavi/subnavi"; to a single controller
that
renders the appropriate content depending on "mainnavi" and
"subnavi". I would like to avoid writing one controller for each
main
navigation point. Which is the appropriate way to do this within
Zend
Framework? Or do you think that the whole approach is
unappropriate?
Thank you.
Regards,
Ivan.
--
Matthew Weier O'Phinney
PHP Developer| [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Zend - The PHP Company | http://www.zend.com/