Archive by Author
Module Support Added to Fever Framework
Posted on 22. Feb, 2010 by Will Fitch.
I’m excited to announce that modules will be supported in time for the public preview on Friday! This is just one of the many steps taken to make Fever as flexible as possible.
Modules Overview
Modules are kind of mini-applications within a larger web application. They maximize component reuse by developing the controllers, [...]
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Fever Framework Update
Posted on 11. Feb, 2010 by Will Fitch.
I just want to update everyone on the status of the framework. It is still on schedule for the February 26th release!
As we countdown to the public beta release, I want to keep you informed of some exciting functionality that’s being added.
Functionality
Along with the JSON controller, a new XML controller has been added. [...]
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Same Website, Different Domain
Posted on 09. Feb, 2010 by Will Fitch.
As you have already noticed, I have updated posts on phpfever.com to go to willfitch.com. This is because I’m preparing the PHP Fever Framework site and it will live on phpfever.com. All previous posts from my blog will now forward (with a 301 redirect) to willfitch.com.
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Introducing the PHP Fever Framework
Posted on 05. Feb, 2010 by Will Fitch.
Overview
The birth of a new MVC framework, like most others, is spawned by frustrations with the functionality of one or more other frameworks: too much emphasis on design theory, not enough in others, speed, flexibility… the list goes on. The Fever Framework is no different. In an attempt to find a happy medium [...]
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Nashville PHPUG Symfony Speakers Announced
Posted on 02. Apr, 2009 by Will Fitch.
On April 24th, Travis Black and Brent Shaffer of Centre{source} will be presenting the Symfony PHP framework. This is our second demonstration after having Shawn McCool present CodeIgniter last month. We are excited to have Centre{source} and look forward to their demonstration.
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April Nashville PHP Users Group Meeting
Posted on 24. Mar, 2009 by Will Fitch.
The April 2009 users group meeting will focus on the Symfony framework. We will be receiving a presentation from Centre{source} where one of the developers is on the Symfony development team. More details to come later.
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The Chain-of-Command Pattern: OOP Techniques in PHP
Posted on 10. Mar, 2009 by Will Fitch.
The chain-of-command pattern, like most others, assists with maintaining a loose coupling within your classes. By providing a series of classes that implement the ICommand interface and do a specific bit of processing, the developer doesn’t have to care which method to execute.
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The Observer Pattern: OOP Techniques in PHP
Posted on 09. Mar, 2009 by Will Fitch.
The observer pattern provides another way to maintain loose coupling within your code. It’s an extremely simple pattern and is implemented similarly across languages. There are two parts: the observer and the observable object. Let’s address them both starting with the observer.
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The Iterator Pattern: OOP Techniques in PHP
Posted on 04. Mar, 2009 by Will Fitch.
The iterator pattern is one of the most useful, yet unused patterns defined. It provides a way for class users to count and iterate over a set of objects related to the class. This is very useful in MVC (Model-View-Controller) models as they handle data and the logic that pertains to it.
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The Factory Pattern: OOP Techniques in PHP
Posted on 02. Mar, 2009 by Will Fitch.
The purpose of the factory pattern is to assist with maintaining loose coupling. Code that is tightly coupled is error prone in that if a class is changed, it can have a domino affect to other scripts using it. This is typical to large-scale systems and smaller systems that grow very fast.
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The Singleton Pattern: OOP Techniques in PHP
Posted on 02. Mar, 2009 by Will Fitch.
The singleton pattern is a common pattern used to make resources exclusive in that there is one of a particular type of resource. The most common usage of this is database connectivity. Typically, an application only wants a single connection to a single database server at any given time. This is where the singleton pattern comes in.
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March Nashville PHP Users Group Meeting
Posted on 01. Mar, 2009 by Will Fitch.
The March Nashville PHP Users Group meeting details are now available. Shawn McCool will be presenting the CodeIgniter PHP Framework. The meeting will be at 1pm CST at Corky’s Brentwood. For additional details, please visit http://www.meetup.com/nashville-php/calendar/9769825/.



