Book Image

CouchDB and PHP Web Development Beginner's Guide

By : Tim Juravich
Book Image

CouchDB and PHP Web Development Beginner's Guide

By: Tim Juravich

Overview of this book

CouchDB is a NoSQL database which is making waves in the development world. It's the tool of choice for many PHP developers so they need to understand the robust features of CouchDB and the tools that are available to them.CouchDB and PHP Web Development Beginner's Guide will teach you the basics and fundamentals of using CouchDB within a project. You will learn how to build an application from beginning to end, learning the difference between the "quick way"ù to do things, and the "right way"ù by looking through a variety of code examples and real world scenarios. You will start with a walkthrough of setting up a sound development environment and then learn to create a variety of documents manually and programmatically. You will also learn how to manage their source control with Git and keep track of their progress. With each new concept, such as adding users and posts to your application, the author will take you through code step-by-step and explain how to use CouchDB's robust features. Finally, you will learn how to easily deploy your application and how to use simple replication to scale your application.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
CouchDB and PHP Web Development Beginner's Guide
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
4
Starting your Application

Time for action — adding an e-mail field to the signup form


Let's add an input field so users can enter an e-mail address into the views/signup.php page.

  1. 1. Open signup.php in your text editor (/Library/Webserver/Documents/verge/views/signup.php)

  2. 2. Add the highlighted code to add a label and input field for the e-mail addresses:

    Signup
    <form action="<?php echo $this->make_route('signup') ?>" method="post">
    <label for="name">Name</label>
    <input id="name" name="name" type="text"> <br />
    <label for="email">Email</label>
    <input id="email" name="email" type="text"> <br />
    
    <input type="Submit" value="Submit">
    </form>
    

What just happened?

We added an additional field to our signup form that will accept the input for an e-mail address. By adding the email field to this form, we will be able to access it on form submission and eventually save it as a CouchDB document.

Using curl calls to post data to CouchDB

We've used curl...