Thursday, July 28. 2005
Those who follow my blog may remember an earlier entry on form validation. I looked into some of the possible
solutions those who commented provided, but other than Solar_Form,
each was either trying to generate HTML, or not generating HTML was
considered a plugin type of behaviour (i.e., the HTML generation was the
norm, and not generating HTML typically added layers). Discouraged, I
continued plugging away on my own solution which was incorporating
Solar_Valid for validations, adding some filtering, adding the ability to
load definitions from a file, and adding the ability to use callbacks for
either filters or validation rules.
I got some code together, tried it out, and felt that either something was
missing, or I was doing something a little wrong. I posted the code source,
and asked Paul Jones for feedback.
After some initial flurries of emails with Paul asking for more detail, me
providing it, Paul asking questions, me attempting to answer... Paul had me
look at the source for Solar_Form. In doing so, I discovered what he was
suspecting, namely, that we were trying to build something similar. Rather
than continue on parallel courses, I decided to jump in and help in this
aspect of the Solar project.
Continue reading "Form madness"
Saturday, July 23. 2005
This past year, Maeve had a month-long unit on Safaris and jungle animals at
daycare. One day, she came home singing:
On Safari, on Safari,
In a jeep, in a jeep,
I can see a lion, I will take a picture,
Click, click, click. Click, click, click.
On Safari, on Safari,
In a jeep, in a jeep,
I can see a tiger, I will take a picture,
Click, click, click. Click, click, click.
And so on.
There's a place just over the Quebec border called Parc Safari that we've been hearing
about, and today we went up there on a family outing -- one of the last that
we'll have with just the three of us (before little Liam is born).
Continue reading "On Safari"
Thursday, July 14. 2005
Not long ago, as Maeve and I were en route to Jen's work one evening, Maeve
was being very insistent that certain things were a certain way, and was
very adamant even as I used a placating tone with her. I asked her,
jokingly, "Why are you so contrary today?" Her reply?
"Because I'm so smart, and because I'm so right."
I almost wrecked the car as I guffawed. Kids. They're so dang cute. And so
right!
File_Fortune has been
released via PEAR.
Changes since the proposal include the addition of a static method for
retrieving a random fortune from a list of files, the addition of a DocBook
tutorial listing several usage examples, renaming the exception classes to
conform to PEAR CS, some minor bugfixes, and some streamlining of the
package definition.
Included in the release is an example script, phpFortune, that can be used
on the command line to get random fortunes from one or more fortune files.
Usage is:
$> phpFortune fortunes
$> phpFortune fortunes simpsons hitchhiker
$> phpFortune
Enjoy!
What a way to start the day -- I had an email from PEPR letting me know that
my File_Fortune
proposal had been accepted!
File_Fortune is a PHP OOP interface to reading and writing fortune files.
It is loosely based on the perl module Fortune.pm, but modified
significantly to better work with PHP file access methods, as well as to add
writing capability.
I will be uploading my initial release shortly, probably as a beta or RC.
So, go fetch those Simpsons, Hitchhiker's Guide, and Star Wars fortune
cookie databases and prepare to add random quotes to your site!
Sunday, July 10. 2005
I've been doing a lot of thinking on form validation recently. Among other
things, I want to be using a standard set of tools for validating form input
at work; I'm also rewriting the family website in PHP, and want to have
consistency there as well. Finally, I truly buy into Chris Shiflett's top two security practices:
filter input, escape output. Validation should always be done, and should be
done rigorously; don't allow anything more than is necessary to get the work
done.
I flirted briefly in the past month with HTML_QuickForm.
Being an observer on the CGI::Application mailing lists, HQF looks like
PHP's answer to perl's Data::FormValidator.
HQF has a high frequency of posts on the php-pear-general lists. A lot of
people seem happy with it. I decided to try it out as an example plugin for
Cgiapp for the latest release.
My problem is that I want to be able to define form validation in a file
outside my script. The reason for this is that as I extend and reuse
classes, I often find that I can use the same general run-modes for a
method... just so long as the form validation logic is separate. This allows
me, for instance, to decide that in one application instance I will require
fields A-M, but in another, I only need A-E (or vice versa). But it requires
no changes to the actual application logic, as the validations are kept
separately, and I have the application instance indicate which validation
file to utilize.
Continue reading "Thoughts on form validation"
Thursday, July 7. 2005
So, last night, Maeve fell asleep in the early evening, on the couch, clutching
her sippy cup and sucking on her bink while watching Scooby Doo. She woke up an
hour later, and after she'd been up for a while and was less groggy, she
announced to Jen and me that, "I'm not going to use my bink ANY MORE. Every
little girl has to give up the bink some time, when they're four, so I'm not
going to use the bink EVER AGAIN." (Imagine dramatic pauses between the all-caps
words there...)
This coming from the girl who has a fit every time her bink isn't within
eyesight and reach. Needless to say, we didn't quite believe her, but we were
willing to support her. We told her that if she wants to stop using the bink,
that's okay; it's also okay if she decides to use it again. (Fully expecting
she'd want it within minutes of going to bed.)
Well... Maeve slept all night without it, and didn't want it this morning, nor
in the car. She's adamant, our little warrior queen! (Which is what the Gaelic
Maeve translates to in English, in case you were wondering.)
I might be jumping the gun here, but I get the feeling our little girl has taken
another step in growing up... and I'm bewildered and a little sad. Much as I've
hated the bink the past year, I also associate it with my little girl... and
she's getting so she's not so little any more!
UPDATE: I jumped the gun. She did go a full 24 hours, but the
following night decided she wanted the bink again. But there is hope
for a bink-less future...
Wednesday, July 6. 2005
I've been doing some thinking on exceptions, and PEAR_Exception in
particular. You may want to skip ahead to read about how to use
PEAR_Exception, as well as some of my thoughts on the class on first use. If
you want the background, read on.
I've created a package proposal on PEAR for a package called File_Fortune,
an OOP interface to reading and writing fortune files. I've been using a
perl module for this on the family website for years, and now that I'm
starting work on the PHP conversion, I thought I'd start with the building
blocks.
In creating the proposal, I started with a PHP5-only version, though I found
that I wasn't using much in PHP5 beyond the public/private/protected/static
keywords. For error handling, I decided to try out PEAR_ErrorStack,
as I'd been hearing buzz about it being the new "preferred" method for error
handling in PEAR. (Honestly, after using it, I'm not too happy with it;
throwing PEAR_Errors was much easier, and easier to manipulate as well --
but that's a subject for another post -- and exceptions were easier still,
though more typing.)
The first comment I got on the proposal was the question: "Why
PHP5?" (Paul wasn't too
surprised by that reaction.) I thought about it, and decided it wasn't
really all that necessary, beyond the fact that I'd need to take some extra
steps to be able to actually test a PHP4 version. So, I did a PHP4 version.
Well, then some chatter happened, and a number of developers said, "Why
not PHP5?" So, I went back to PHP5. And then somebody else said,
"Use PEAR_Exception." So, I started playing with that, and we finally get to
the subject of this post.
Continue reading "Notes on PEAR_Exception"
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