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I am new to the world of coding and am having a hard time understanding what MVC is and how I can apply it to PHP. At the risk of this question being closed I have scoured the web for numerous articles however none of them explain them explain MVC in a way I can understand.

For example, I came across the article at Coding Horror - http://www.codinghorror.com/blog/2008/05/understanding-model-view-controller.html however I am unsure how I can apply it to PHP. I apologise for posting an ambiguous question earlier however I hope this question is more direct.

Let's take a look at example that will hopefully help me understand. The objective is a user must complete a registration form that will have the details recorded in a database.

I currently have the following files - a PHP file (i.e. with the extension PHP) with XHTML markup - There is no code in here as yet except XHTML mark-up - a CSS file

I have also have a MySQL database

  1. How would develop the registration form using MVC?
  2. What files should I have?
  3. What folder structures would I have?

I am not looking for actual code but an example of how I would develop a MVC application.

1 Answer 1

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Folder structures are irrelevant. The main point of MVC is a logical separation.

You should have one model, which takes care of your data. This includes storing data in the database (or elsewhere), validating the integrity of data (i.e. make sure all values are as you want them, no strings in fields where you want numbers etc.) and retrieving data.

You should have a view, which just presents data to the user or gives the user an interface to interact with your application. That's typically your files containing (X)HTML.

Then you need a controller that makes these two things work together. The controller is responsible for receiving user requests, deciding what to do with them and rendering an appropriate view in response.

These three parts can be realized in many ways (classes, objects, functions, files), as long as the logical separation is preserved. The logical separation makes things easier in the long run, since you always keep the core of the application (models) separate from the presentation (views) and can dynamically combine both in many ways (using controllers).

The typical logical flow for a form would be:

  • controller renders a view containing a form
  • form is submitted to controller
  • the controller tries to save the data using the model
  • the model validates the data, gives thumbs down if it is invalid or thumbs up if it was saved correctly
  • if thumbs down, the controller outputs an error message
  • if thumbs up, the controller redirect the user along to the next step

Visualized it's something like this:

Request --> Controller --> View --> Response
              |   ^
              v   |
              Model
              |   ^
              v   |
             Database

I suggest you start playing around with an existing MVC framework to get the feel for it.

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  • @deceze - Thanks. Please correct me if I am wrong. Model - This is a single PHP file that would make the database connection, validate the data being entered in the form e.g. invalid email address, incorrect name length, etc, insert into the database the values of the form, etc. Following OOP principles, each one of these would be or could be separate classes View - This is a bunch of files that render the look and feel of the form e.g. XHTML and CSS May 20, 2011 at 3:35
  • @deceze - Controller - Forgive me for being naive here, why have the controller when all it is doing is passing information typed out in the form to the file that does database connections. the validation, insertion, etc. Can you give me an example of what request a controller would handle? May 20, 2011 at 3:35
  • @Peanuts The model(s) is typically one class per database table. I.e. the model class User would take care of the table users, class Car would take care of cars etc. Also, don't think of the model as validating forms, models validate data that may come from anywhere. The controller supplies data to the model (from whatever source) and decides in which form to respond to the user. Think of implementing a JSON-powered API as alternative/addition to forms, and you see where MVC becomes useful.
    – deceze
    May 20, 2011 at 3:39
  • @Peanuts When the data "enters" your application, it stops being a form and should be converted to a consistent internal representation of data. This may just be a standardized array format or a data object. This object can be passed around between the controller, model and view and it doesn't matter how it got there. Only the view renders it as a concrete representation like HTML, JSON or XML. That's abstraction, and it really helps as your app grows and becomes more complex.
    – deceze
    May 20, 2011 at 3:42
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    @Peanuts The flow is: controller receives request, controller decides which models need to be involved, controller uses models as needed, models take care of their domain (database interaction, data validation) and tell the controller about any problems, controller decides how to respond to the user (error messages? normal view? redirect? HTML, XML, JSON?), controller passes data for output to view, view renders the given data in appropriate format. See my awesome ASCII visualization above.
    – deceze
    May 20, 2011 at 4:33

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