Book Image

PHP 7 Programming Blueprints

By : Jose Palala, Martin Helmich
Book Image

PHP 7 Programming Blueprints

By: Jose Palala, Martin Helmich

Overview of this book

When it comes to modern web development, performance is everything. The latest version of PHP has been improvised and updated to make it easier to build for performance, improved engine execution, better memory usage, and a new and extended set of tools. If you’re a web developer, what’s not to love? This guide will show you how to make full use of PHP 7 with a range of practical projects that will not only teach you the principles, but also show you how to put them into practice. It will push and extend your skills, helping you to become a more confident and fluent PHP developer. You’ll find out how to build a social newsletter service, a simple blog with a search capability using Elasticsearch, as well as a chat application. We’ll also show you how to create a RESTful web service, a database class to manage a shopping cart on an e-commerce site and how to build an asynchronous microservice architecture. With further guidance on using reactive extensions in PHP, we’re sure that you’ll find everything you need to take full advantage of PHP 7. So dive in now!
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
PHP 7 Programming Blueprints
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
4
Build a Simple Blog with Search Capability using Elasticsearch

Summary


In this chapter, you learned how to use the PHP-PEG library to implement a parser, interpreter, and compiler for a custom expression language. You also learned how to define grammars for such languages and how you can use them to develop domain-specific languages. These can be used to offer end-user development features in large software systems, which allow users to customize their software's business rules to a large extent.

Dynamically modifying a program using domain-specific languages can be a strong selling point, especially in enterprise systems. They allow users to modify a program's behavior by themselves, without having to wait for a developer to change a business rule and trigger a lengthy release process. This way, new business rules can be implemented quickly and allow your customers to react quickly to changing requirements.