Book Image

Expert PHP 5 Tools

By : Dirk Merkel
Book Image

Expert PHP 5 Tools

By: Dirk Merkel

Overview of this book

Even if you find writing PHP code easy, writing code that is efficient and easy to maintain and reuse is not so straightforward. Self-taught PHP developers and programmers transitioning from other languages often lack the knowledge to work with PHP on an enterprise level. They need to take their PHP development skills to that level by learning the skills and tools necessary to write maintainable and efficient code.This book will enable you to take your PHP development skills to an enterprise level by teaching you the skills and tools necessary to write maintainable and efficient code. You will learn how to perform activities such as unit testing, enforcing coding standards, automating deployment, and interactive debugging using tools created for PHP developers – all the information in one place. Your code will be more maintainable, efficient, and self-documented.From the design phase to actually deploying the application, you will learn concepts and apply them using the best-of-breed tools available in PHP.Experienced developers looking for expertise in PHP development will learn how to follow best practices within the world of PHP. The book contains many well-documented code samples and recipes that can be used as a starting point for producing quality code.Specifically, you will learn to design an application with UML, code it in Eclipse with PDT, document it with phpDocumentor, debug it interactively with Xdebug, test it by writing PHPUnit tests, manage source code in Subversion, speed up development and increase stability by using Zend Framework, pull everything together using continuous integration, and deploy the application automatically with Phing – all in one book. The author's experience in PHP development enables him to share insights on using enterprise tools, in a clear and friendly way.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
Expert PHP 5 Tools
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
Preface

Introducing Subversion


Subversion was conceived as a replacement for CVS. Rather than try to fix CVS, which was being held back in its evolution by its legacy underpinning, the developers set out to create a new tool from the ground up. The idea was to make it significantly similar to CVS so that developers would feel right at home and the learning curve, while switching from one tool to the other, would be minimal. Subversion is not a drop-in replacement for CVS, but rather an evolution of the ideas and concepts first successfully realized by CVS. At that, it has been very successful. Subversion is generally known as CVS without the annoyances.

There are many resources available on the web to learn more about Subversion, but your starting point should be the project's home page:

http://subversion.tigris.org

Client installation

As with most open source packages, there are essentially two ways of getting it installed on your system. First, you can download and compile the source code. If...