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Home/ Questions/Q 563697
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T12:41:15+00:00 2026-05-13T12:41:15+00:00

Should you separate model functions, even if they retrieve the fields of data? Lets

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Should you separate model functions, even if they retrieve the fields of data?

Lets say I have an Articles Model that gets Articles from the database.

I have a function, getUserArticles($id), that gets the users articles. I have a function, getAllArticles($offset, $limit), that gets a list of articles.

Should I leave the two functions separate from one another, or combine them somehow.

The reason I ask is because if I were to alter, add, or remove a field from the query, I would have to do the change in every function. So if I change my mind and decide I no longer want to show the time_added for every article, I would have to remove it from every function.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T12:41:16+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 12:41 pm

    It is better to expose two distinct functions to the user of the API but internally you can use the same code for both if you believe that there will be better code reuse that way.

    For example: you will define a generic getArticles (used internally only)

       articles getArticles($userId, $offset, $limit) {
          // do searching while handling the different cases if $userId is set or not and the same for the offsets
        }
    

    then you define your exposed functions like this

       articles getUserArticles($id){
         return getArticles($id, -1,-1);
       }
    
      articles getAllArticles($offset, $limit) {
        return getArticles(-1, $offset, $limit);
      }
    

    NOTE: only do this if you believe there is common code between the two functions. If there is no common code then keep them separate and there is no need for the generic getArticles function which I suggested.

    I don’t know if the above is valid php code but I think the idea is clear.

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