Integration and Automation in Practice: CI/CD in Mule Integration and Automat...
PHP Design Patterns Explained
1. Object Oriented Design Patterns for PHP <?php if ( $this ->try && ! $this ->succeed()) $this ->try++; /* Robert Gonzalez, 2008-12-18 */ ?> An introduction of sorts into the world of design patterns for object oriented PHP, as brought to you by Robert Gonzalez. http://www.robert-gonzalez.com [email_address] http://www.robert-gonzalez.com/personal/meetups/apache-49-20081218-code.tar.gz http://www.robert-gonzalez.com/personal/meetups/apache-49-20081218-presentation.odp http://www.slideshare.net/RobertGonzalez/object-oriented-design-patterns-for-php-presentation/
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31. Object Oriented Design Patterns for PHP <?php if ( $this ->try && ! $this ->succeed()) $this ->try++; /* Robert Gonzalez, 2008-12-18 */ ?> Knowing what we know now, can you think of how these patterns can be applied to your applications to make for faster, more robust and cleaner application code? Maybe we can look at some code...
32. Object Oriented Design Patterns for PHP <?php if ( $this ->try && ! $this ->succeed()) $this ->try++; /* Robert Gonzalez, 2008-12-18 */ ?> Design patterns are a great way to modularize your code and create reusable structures. But they mean nothing if they go unused. Go code something. Much more information about design patterns, reusable code and object oriented programming can be found by simply typing those keywords into the Google search box :) http://www.robert-gonzalez.com [email_address]