Book Image

Learning PHP 7

By : Antonio L Zapata (GBP)
Book Image

Learning PHP 7

By: Antonio L Zapata (GBP)

Overview of this book

PHP is a great language for building web applications. It is essentially a server-side scripting language that is also used for general purpose programming. PHP 7 is the latest version with a host of new features, and it provides major backwards-compatibility breaks. This book begins with the fundamentals of PHP programming by covering the basic concepts such as variables, functions, class, and objects. You will set up PHP server on your machine and learn to read and write procedural PHP code. After getting an understanding of OOP as a paradigm, you will execute MySQL queries on your database. Moving on, you will find out how to use MVC to create applications from scratch and add tests. Then, you will build REST APIs and perform behavioral tests on your applications. By the end of the book, you will have the skills required to read and write files, debug, test, and work with MySQL.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Learning PHP 7
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Using Composer


Even though this is not a necessary component when implementing the MVC pattern, Composer has been an indispensable tool for any PHP web application over the last few years. The main goal of this tool is to help you manage the dependencies of your application, that is, the third-party libraries (of code) that we need to use in our application. We can achieve that by just creating a configuration file that lists them, and by running a command in your command line.

You need to install Composer on your development machine (see Chapter 1, Setting Up the Environment). Make sure that you have it by executing the following command:

$ composer –version

This should return the version of your Composer installation. If it does not, return to the installation section to fix the problem.

Managing dependencies

As we stated earlier, the main goal of Composer is to manage dependencies. For example, we've already implemented our configuration reader, the Config class, but if we knew of someone...