The domain of doom ..
In real world situation the validation is rarely a straightforward process. Instead you have several unrelated concerns:
- checking if data inside an instance is consistent with business rules
- making sure that state of instance is not conflicting with other domain structures
- verifying the integrity of information against existing data and constraints in storage
If you are using active record for representing your domain model (don't confuse with M in MVC), then all these three aspect become a responsibility of single object.
Which is what you have now.
But there is hope ..
The best option is to separate all these responsibilities (all hail SRP). Basically what you do is divide your current setup in thee different groups of structures:
domain objects: for dealing with specific rules of domain entity
data mappers: for storage abstraction
services: for interaction between domain objects and mappers (or other domain objects)
Since your question was somewhat confusing (the were users and profiles and saving and validation and then something wasn't there), I am not sure if I understood it correctly, but here is a small example:
public function createProfile( $id, $email, $name )
{
$account = new Account;
$account->setId( $id );
$accountMapper = new AccountMapper( $pdo ); // explained below
if ( $accountMapper->fetch( $account ) === false )
{
$this->errors[] = .. something about missing account
return;
}
$profile = new Profile;
$profile->setEmail( $email )
->setName( $name );
if ( $profile->isValid() === false )
{
$this->errors[] = .. something about invalid profile
return;
}
try
{
$profileMapper = new ProfileMapper( $pdo ); // explained below
$profileMapper->store( $profile );
}
catch ( Exception $e )
{
$this->errrors[] = .. something about failing to create profile
return;
}
$account->addProfile( $profile );
$accountMapper->store( $account );
}
This is extremely simplified example. Especially where mappers are initialized, because that part in real-world situation would be handles by some factory. Kinda like described in this post.
The point here is that the validation of domain data and and insurance of DB integrity is done separately. The underlaying APIs for interaction with database actually return you error code is you violate UNIQUE KEY
or FOREIGN KEY
or any other constraint, which you can then use to determine what went wrong.
The method itself would be part of a service (in this case - some service that manages user accounts).
Note: if your application needs to perform multiple SQL interactions per operation and those interaction need to be done as transaction with ability to do rollback, then, instead of using data mappers directly, you should be looking at implementing Units of Work. To learn about UoW, you will have to read Patterns of Enterprise Application Architecture, because it's really extensive subject.