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I'm building a ticketSystem api in Laravel. And I've got a lot of events. And I'm wondering if I'm doing it right. So for example when a user is created it fires the event: CreateUserEvent

That event has a couple of listeners like:

  • CreateUser
  • CreatePackage
  • SendEmail

I've got for almost every crud things an event with multiple listeners. Is this the normal way of doing this kind of things? In my controllers I almost fire only events.

I've already watched a couple of videos about events for example (https://laracasts.com/series/intermediate-laravel/episodes/3) But I'm still a bit confused.

So basically my question is: Is it normal that your webapp exist out of a lot of events? If it's not where do you use events?

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  • If you want to do X every time Y happens then triggering an event when Y happens and having an X_listener listening in order to do X is a good way to go. I'm a bit confused as to why CreateUser would be a listener to a CreateUserEvent
    – apokryfos
    Mar 31, 2016 at 11:55
  • This question isn’t really suitable for Stack Overflow as it’s primarily opinion-based. Mar 31, 2016 at 12:44
  • @MartinBean I do not agree with you. This is a good question, not primarily opinion based as he asks for the right way to use events. Not asking how you (and by you I mean anyone who reads the question) use events.
    – Ben
    Mar 31, 2016 at 12:58
  • @Ben “So basically my question is: Is it normal that your webapp exist out of a lot of events?” This is not a programming issue. This is asking for opinions of other developers on how they structure their apps. Mar 31, 2016 at 13:24
  • If there is a good practise for it people can ask for it. Its a matter of perspective where you decide to stay in the corner you're standing. Lately I've seen SO become a bit preachy about what you are allowed to ask and what not. It wouldn't hurt the community to be nicer and help people with these subjects as well. There's an unclear thing from the askers perspective and he's reaching out for help/guidance.
    – Ben
    Mar 31, 2016 at 13:28

1 Answer 1

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Actually, you are making it complex. Use the single event listener for a single event and do the actions in that event handler. For example:

Pseudo code

// In EventServiceProvider
protected $listen = [
    'user.created' => ['App\Handlers\Events\UserEvents@userCreated'],
],

Somewhere in your app:

// ...
if($user = User::create($request->all())) {
    app('event')->fire('user.created', $user);
}

...

The handler App\Handlers\Events\UserEvents@userCreated:

<?php namespace App\Handlers\Events;

use App\User;
use App\Package;
use App\Services\Mail\UserMailer;

class UserEvents {

    protected $mailer = null;
    protected $package = null;

    public function __construct(UserMailer $mailer, Package $package)
    {
        $this->mailer = $mailer;
        $this->package = $package;
    }

    public function userCreated(User $user)
    {
        $this->package->create($user); // <-- An action to be taken

        $this->mailer->notifyUser($user); // <-- Another action to be taken
    }

}

So, this way, you can handle your events and use the handler to take additional actions for you on a particular event.

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  • 1
    Thanks for the great explanation.
    – Jamie
    Mar 31, 2016 at 15:09

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