Book Image

Yii2 By Example

By : Fabrizio Caldarelli
Book Image

Yii2 By Example

By: Fabrizio Caldarelli

Overview of this book

Yii is a high-performance PHP framework best for developing Web 2.0 applications. It provides fast, secure, and professional features to create robust projects, however, this rapid development requires the ability to organize common tasks together to build a complete application. It's all too easy to get confused; this is where this book comes in. This book contains a series of practical project examples for developers starting from scratch. Each section contains the most relevant theories for every topic as you walk through developing each project, focusing on key aspects that commonly confuse users. The book starts with all the framework’s basic concepts, such as controllers and views, to introduce you to Yii and creating your first application, a simple news reader. You will be learn to configure URL rules to make a pretty URL, essential for search engine optimization. Next, you will walk through Model and ActiveRecord, key concepts in database interaction. The second application you will develop is a reservation system that allows you to manage rooms, customers, and reservations. For this, you will use database connection through SQL and ActiveRecord. More complex than the first one, this application will introduce you to the advanced template of Yii 2, splitting the app into two parts: a frontend for all visitors and a backend for the admin. Finally, you will move on to the last two applications: one that allows connections from remote clients, through RESTful components of Yii 2, and another that creates and organizes automatic tasks using the console application structure of Yii 2.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Yii2 By Example
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Interacting with console applications


The console is the third application installed by default with the advanced template.

This app is configured to launch commands through a console access, and it has the same application structure of those already seen in the previous chapters. Therefore, in this section, we require a console access to the host.

Compared to the web and API applications used until now, there are some differences.

The public properties of a controller, in fact, are visible from the command line as option. It is required to extend the option() method of the controller to make those properties available. Also, based on specific action, action parameters are passed as arguments of the command line.

Finally, a console controller action can return an exit code, a number where 0 indicates that everything is OK, a best practice for console application development.

Here is a typical usage of the console application starting from a shell:

yii <route> [--option1=value1 --option2...