Book Image

Clean Code in PHP

By : Carsten Windler, Alexandre Daubois
5 (1)
Book Image

Clean Code in PHP

5 (1)
By: Carsten Windler, Alexandre Daubois

Overview of this book

PHP is a beginner-friendly language, but also one that is rife with complaints of bad code,;yet no clean code books are specific to PHP. Enter Clean Code in PHP. This book is a one-stop guide to learning the theory and best practices of clean code specific to real-world PHP app development environments. This PHP book is cleanly split to help you navigate through coding practices and theories to understand and adopt the nuances of the clean code paradigm. In addition to covering best practices, tooling for code quality, and PHP design patterns, this book also presents tips and techniques for working on large-scale PHP apps with a team and writing effective documentation for your PHP projects. By the end of this book, you’ll be able to write human-friendly PHP code, which will fuel your PHP career growth and set you apart from the competition.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
1
Part 1 – Introducing Clean Code
8
Part 2 – Maintaining Code Quality

An outlook on CD

Eventually, your CI pipeline will work so well that you can fully trust it. It will prevent shipping broken code into production reliably, and at some point, you find yourself doing fewer and less-manual checks if the deployment went well. At that point, you could think about using CD: this describes the combination of tools and processes to deploy code to any environment automatically.

A usual workflow is that whenever changes get merged into a certain branch (for example, main for the production environment), the CI/CD pipeline will be triggered automatically. If the changes pass all checks and tests, the process is trusted so much that the code gets deployed into the desired destination without testing the build result manually anymore.

If you ever had the opportunity to work in such an environment, you surely do not want to miss it. Besides a great CI/CD pipeline and 99% trust in it, it requires some more processes in place to quickly react if a deployment...