Book Image

concrete5 Cookbook

Book Image

concrete5 Cookbook

Overview of this book

concrete5 is an increasingly popular open source content management system because of its incredible and easy-to-use interface. But, it also comes complete with a robust PHP framework, allowing web developers to create custom websites and applications with ease. "concrete5 Cookbook" is a practical collection of solutions to tasks that both novice and experienced concrete5 developers face on a regular basis. Readers will learn multiple subjects, including full blueprints for developing an event calendar add-on and an image gallery block. Developers new to concrete5 will quickly learn how to customize concrete5 to their needs, and seasoned pros will find it an excellent quick reference for performing specific tasks. "concrete5 Cookbook" will transform ordinary PHP developers into concrete5 experts capable of bending concrete5 to their will and unleashing the true power of this up-and-coming content management system. Throughout the course of over 140 recipes and 3 bonus project blueprint chapters, PHP developers will learn how to create custom blocks and dashboard interfaces as well as programmatically work with pages, files, users, permissions, and more. Discover the built-in Active Record support that makes working with databases simple and maintainable. Readers will also learn how to take advantage of the numerous helper classes included in concrete5, and will dive deep into the concrete5 MVC framework to create powerful custom websites and applications. Tie together all of the concepts learned in the recipes with 3 bonus chapters featuring complete blueprints to create a calendar add-on, an image gallery block type, and tips on how to sell your themes and add-ons for money! "concrete5 Cookbook" is a complete collection of recipes to solve the most common (and some not-so-common) tasks that concrete5 developers will face on a regular basis.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
concrete5 Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Reading and writing to the configuration registry


Storing key and value pairs in data dictionaries is a common task in any modern programming language. concrete5 allows you to store configuration settings using the Config class, rather than storing key/value settings in the database or elsewhere. In this recipe, we will write a configuration preference that signifies if the site administrator wants to allow comments on the site or not.

How to do it...

  1. Write the preference to the system configuration dictionary:

    Config::save('allow_comments', true);
  2. Read the value of the preference item:

    $allowComments = Config::get('allow_comments');

How it works...

concrete5 stores the key and value pairs in the Config table of the database. The Config class presents a clean and simple API to make writing and reading configuration values as easy as possible. These configuration keys persist throughout concrete5, so developers should take extra caution to prevent clashes with other configuration values of the same...