You definitely need a Service Layer to apply such business logic, process your entity, generate a result and return that result back to the caller rather than handling all of this logic in controller level.
ZF's built-in Service Manager would be good place to take a look.
I would handle that requirement by following steps:
- Write an
EventService
class under Application\Service
namespace. This EventService
depends on doctrine's EventRepository
and/or ObjectManager
's itself. Pass this dependencies to the EventService
on construction time (you'll need a factory) or take a look ObjectManagerAwareInterface to figure out other ways (ie: setter injection).
- This
EventService
would have some public methods like getEventById($id)
, getEventsByDateInterval(\DateTime $from, \DateTime $to)
, getActiveEvents()
etc..
- These public methods like
getEventById($id)
are interfaces for your controllers to interact your application.
EventService
should/may have some private methods which doesn't accessible from outside and apply some domain rules on resultset or manipulate the business objects or even generates some other lightweight data transfer objects for specific use cases, internally.
- Write a
FooEvent
entity. This entity would have some properties like $id
, $title
, $startDate
, $endDate
and these entity properties probably will be persisted to database.
- In
FooEvent
entity, write a one-line public method named isSingleDayEvent()
which returns a boolean.
Something like:
public function isSingleDayEvent()
{
return $this->getStartDate() === $this->getEndDate();
}
After all of this fancy steps, our viewAction can be written something like this:
public function viewAction()
{
$id = (int) $this->params()->fromQuery('id');
// Event instance can be an actual entity or DTO
$event = $this->eventService->getEventById($id);
$viewModel = new ViewModel();
$viewModel->setVariable('event', $event);
return $viewModel;
}
- Now, we can write a ViewHelper with a name like
EventRenderer
to easily render events on view layer. The key point is our view helper accepts an \FooEvent
(or DTO) instance to work. (This is not a MUST too)
For example:
<?php
namespace Application\View\Helper;
use Zend\View\Helper\AbstractHelper;
use Application\Entity\FooEvent;
class EventRenderer extends AbstractHelper
{
public function __invoke(FooEvent $event)
{
$time = '';
if($event->isSingleDayEvent()) {
$time = '<strong>Time: </strong>: '. $event->getStartTime();
} else {
$time = '<strong>Time: </strong>: '. $event->getStartTime();
}
return $time;
}
}
I simplified the helper for the sake of other key points.
And finally, inside the view.phtml
, we can output the result of all this complex processes writing fewer lines:
echo '<h1>Event: '.$this->event->getTitle().'</h1>';
echo $this->eventRenderer($this->event);
By this way, in the next stages of your project when you need a REST service for example, writing and API endpoint will be easy as pie: writing a RestfulEventController
will be enough while re-using whole service layer, without duplicating bunch of code.
I tried to summarize some best practices from my perspective, some steps definitely can be improved. I write this detailed answer because I asked similar questions several times in the past and couldn't find the exact answer but the partial solutions.