All,
I am studying some sample code given in my web dev class as an example of MVC (again, for the web). In this code, there’s a system to navigate from the index.php page to the various controllers (which then call the Model and View modules), and then back into index.php.
I understand how the MVC works.
What I’m grappling with is the navigation mechanism. I am having difficulties understanding how all the pieces work together.
Could anyone take a look at the code below and tell me if this matches a well known method / pattern to deal with dynamic website navigation? (Maybe the Front Controller?) If it does, then my hope is that I can more easily do some more research on it.
Many thanks!
JDelage
Index.php
<?php
require_once("User.php");
session_start();
if (isset($_GET['action']))
$action= $_GET['action'];
else
$action="";
switch ($action) {
case 'login':
require_once('Login.php');
$command= new LoginControler();
break;
case 'logoff':
require_once('Logoff.php');
$command= new LogoffControler();
break;
// Several other cases
default:
require_once('Unknown.php');
$command= new UnknownControle();
}
$command->execute();
require_once('EntryMenu.php'); // Those are objects that represent both the
// menu label and the links.
$menu= array(
new EntryMenu("Login", "index.php", array("action" => "logon")),
new EntryMenu("Logoff", "index.php", array("action" => "logoff")),
new EntryMenu("Write", "index.php", array("action" => "write")),
new EntryMenu("Read", "index.php", array("action" => "read"))
);
if ($command->redirect) {
header('Location: ' . $command->redirect);
} else if ($command->page) {
include("ui/header.php");
include("ui/menu.php");
echo "<div class='content'>";
include("ui/". $command->page);
echo "</div>";
include("ui/footer.php");
}
?>
Controler.php
<?php
class Controler {
public $page= "problem.php";
function execute() {}
}
?>
LogoffControler.php
<?php
require_once('Controler.php');
class LogoffControler extends Controler {
function execute() {
$this->redirect= "index.php";
unset($_SESSION['user']);
}
}
?>
LoginControler.php
<?php
require_once('LoginModel.php'); // This manages the exchanges with the user db
require_once('Controler.php');
class ConnexionControle extends Controler {
public $page= "LoginForm.php";
function execute() {
// More code to deal with incorrectly filled login forms
$login = new LoginModel();
$login->loginUser($_POST['login'], $_POST['password']);
if ($login->userLogedIn()) {
$_SESSION['user']= $login->user;
$this->redirect= "index.php";
}
// More code to deal with invalid logins
}
}
?>
I am assuming you understand the controller part, and is asking about the switch..case statements. I haven’t come across an official name for that yet,but most MVC frameworks for PHP (Kohana, CakePHP, CodeIgniter, Fat Free and etc.) calls that ‘routing’. It’s mapping of a URL to a controller.
Using a switch..case sets of statement is one of the easier ways. More sophisticated solutions use RegEx to match pre-defined URL patterns to resolve what controller to invoke, and what are its parameters (usually bundled as a ‘request’)
Other methods include using URL rewriting to come up with pretty urls, such as
/articles/month/nov/article-id/3which in ‘ugly url form’ is :