Book Image

The Art of Modern PHP 8

By : Joseph Edmonds
5 (1)
Book Image

The Art of Modern PHP 8

5 (1)
By: Joseph Edmonds

Overview of this book

PHP has come a long way since its introduction. While the language has evolved with PHP 8, there are still a lot of websites running on a version of PHP that is no longer supported. If you are a PHP developer working with legacy PHP systems and want to discover the tenants of modern PHP, this is the book for you. The Art of Modern PHP 8 walks you through the latest PHP features and language concepts. The book helps you upgrade your knowledge of PHP programming and practices. Starting with object-oriented programming (OOP) in PHP and related language features, you'll work through modern programming techniques such as inheritance, understand how it contrasts with composition, and finally look at more advanced language features. You'll learn about the MVC pattern by developing your own MVC system and advance to understanding what a DI container does by building a toy DI container. The book gives you an overview of Composer and how to use it to create reusable PHP packages. You’ll also find techniques for deploying these packages to package libraries for other developers to explore. By the end of this PHP book, you'll have equipped yourself with modern server-side programming techniques using the latest versions of PHP.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
1
Section 1 – PHP 8 OOP
Free Chapter
2
Chapter 1: Object-Oriented PHP
5
Section 2 – PHP Types
7
Chapter 5: Object Types, Interfaces, and Unions
9
Section 3 – Clean PHP 8 Patterns and Style
13
Section 4 – PHP 8 Composer Package Management (and PHP 8.1)
16
Section 5 – Bonus Section - PHP 8.1

Composition–the modern, flexible "has a" style

So, inheritance seems great, doesn't it? You can keep your code really DRY by defining commonly used functionality in a parent or abstract class and then share that across a huge number of children. That's what a lot of people thought a few years ago, and then they worked on Magento…

What does DRY mean?

DRY stands for "don't repeat yourself" and with regards to coding, it means avoid copy-pasting and duplicating code and instead structure things so that any code that needs to be reused is packaged up in a way that facilitates that. It could be as simple as a global function or constant or could be a full-blown class that encapsulates the bundle of functionality that you want to share.

If we went with the hugely overused analogy of animals when discussing inheritance, then we could define a whole taxonomy with AbstractOrganism at the top and then child classes all the way down&...