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Build server-side applications more efficiently - and improve your PHP programming skills in the process - by learning how to use design patterns in your code. This book shows you how to apply several object-oriented patterns through simple examples, and demonstrates many of them in full-fledged working applications.
Learn how these reusable patterns help you solve complex problems, organize object-oriented code, and revise a big project by only changing small parts. With Learning PHP Design Patterns, you'll learn how to adopt a more sophisticated programming style and dramatically reduce development time. Learn design pattern concepts, including how to select patterns to handle specific problems Get an overview of object-oriented programming concepts such as composition, encapsulation, polymorphism, and inheritance Apply creational design patterns to create pages dynamically, using a factory method instead of direct instantiation Make changes to existing objects or structure without having to change the original code, using structural design patterns Use behavioral patterns to help objects work together to perform tasks Interact with MySQL, using behavioral patterns such as Proxy and Chain of Responsibility Explore ways to use PHP's built-in design pattern interfaces
Table des matières
Dedication:
Preface
Easing into the Fundamentals of Design Patterns
Chapter 1: PHP and Object-Oriented Programming
Chapter 2: Basic Concepts in OOP
Chapter 3: Basic Design Pattern Concepts
Chapter 4: Using UMLs with Design Patterns
Creational Design Patterns
Chapter 5: Factory Method Design Pattern
Chapter 6: Prototype Design Pattern
Structural Design Patterns
Chapter 7: The Adapter Pattern
Chapter 8: Decorator Design Pattern
Behavioral Design Patterns
Chapter 9: The Template Method Pattern
Chapter 10: The State Design Pattern
MySQL and PHP Design Patterns
Chapter 11: A Universal Class for Connections and a Proxy Pattern for Security
Chapter 12: The Flexibility of the Strategy Design Pattern
Chapter 13: The Chain of Responsibility Design Pattern
Chapter 14: Building a Multidevice CMS with the Observer Pattern
Colophon
A propos de l'auteur
Dr. William B. Sanders is a Professor of Multimedia Web Design and Development at the University of Hartford. He teaches courses in PHP, MySQL, C#, SQL, HTML5, CSS, and ActiionScript 3.0 among other Internet languages. He co-authored ActionScript 3.0 Design Patterns (O'Reilly, 2007) and has been actively working with design patterns in PHP for several years. He has published 45 computer and computer-related books, written software ranging from Basic to Assembly Language to Flash Media Server and served as a consultant and beta tester for different computer software companies including Macromedia and Adobe. He also is an Apple iOS Devloper.