1

I have a few DataObjects that have a price tier associated to them. I could build this relationship in another DataObject however these tiers aren't going to change and I thought the best way was to define them in config.yml.

Ideally I'd like to define the DataObject like:

private static $db = array(
    'Price' => 'Enum(array("Tier 1", "Tier 2"))'
)

However I can't think of a way to do this properly in SilverStripe having a single point of maintenance like a yaml. I also thought of just making it a Varchar and checking to make sure it's in the array before setting it however this won't allow things like populating lists and so forth via the enum (probably should call the config anyway I guess). I could also just write out the array however there would be at least two places for it which would be harder to maintain.

What's the best way to do what I'm trying to achieve which is several objects referencing an array set in a single place?

4 Answers 4

3

As shown by other answers, you can accomplish that in many ways. In a project I worked on for example I have something similar to the following:

// You need to put this into a _config.php. It copies the definition
// of DataObject2.Field2 into DataObject1.Field1.
$cfg = Config::inst();
$db = $cfg->get('DataObject1', 'db');
$db['Field1'] = $cfg->get('DataObject2', 'db')['Field2'];
$db = $config->update('DataObject1', 'db', $db);

But in my opinion the most elegant solution would be to define a new class, something like:

class MyEnum extends Enum
{
    /**
     * Enum values.
     * @config
     */
    private static $values;

    public function __construct($name = null, $default = null)
    {
        parent::__construct($name, $this->config()->get('values'), $default);
    }
}

After that you could define the values in plain YAML:

MyEnum:
  values:
    - First
    - Second
    ...
2
  • I think I like your extension the most out of all the possible answers. Seems very reusable. I guess in my db then I just have "Price" => "MyEnum"?
    – Rudiger
    Jan 24, 2017 at 23:15
  • Yes. I think you could also specify the default value, if relevant, e.g. MyEnum("Default value").
    – ntd
    Jan 25, 2017 at 8:39
2

You could apply the same db fields to multiple DataObjects by creating a DataExtension and applying it to all the DataObjects you want to add the fields to.

0
1

Of course you can add and overwrite $db keys in your config yml like:

MyDataObject:
  db:
    Price: "Enum('Tier 1,Tier 2,Tier 3', 'Tier 3')"

Just be sure to use the right syntax for Enum, it's easier with the old comma seperated syntax. In the example above "Tier 3" is default.

With defining it in yml it might break the order when you use scaffolding, haven't tested this yet.

You might also think about using a has_one relation to a simple dataobject instead. You can manage that in a ModelAdmin and which might be easier to translate later on. Also the QuickAddNew module is a good helper to add new DOs on the fly beneath a dropdown field.

4
  • The data object will still have a table though won't it?
    – Rudiger
    Jan 24, 2017 at 5:48
  • 1
    Of course it's another (very simple) table, but i think that's no performance killer. Sounds like a bit complicated first but will become handy later. And as you try to get it "configurable/flexible" it might be worth the effort. Using PopulateDefaults() you can also prefill the table. If the values of the enum are kind of "Content" it also may be in the database.
    – wmk
    Jan 24, 2017 at 5:56
  • Yeah, my reasoning for not wanting it in a table was that the price for the tier would be defined in the translation table (as the tier would directly relate to the country they are in). As the price is defined in a yml I thought it would be counter to have the list of tiers in the db
    – Rudiger
    Jan 24, 2017 at 5:59
  • You can pull the price for a tier model from configuration or whatever, it's just the assignment of a tier to your dataobjects that you're concerned about right?
    – scrowler
    Jan 24, 2017 at 6:05
1

I'm not 100% sure what you're asking, but if it's like the title and you're asking whether you can define Enum DB field values in YAML, yes - you can:

MyDataObject:
  db:
    Price: Enum("Tier 1,Tier 2")

What you can't do is add more values to the Enum from other configuration sources (including private statics), because the enum value is treated as a string literal rather than a YAML array.


If your question is "Can I define a common configuration for $db and use it for multiple DataObjects", then the YAML approach (config in general) won't work, since configuration values are tied to a class and are parsed earlier in the process than when DataObject::database_fields tells the DB schema what to do.

2
  • Yeah, I guess my question is "Can I define a common configuration for $db and use it for multiple DataObjects"
    – Rudiger
    Jan 24, 2017 at 5:47
  • 1
    Yeah, no :) As @wmk suggested, you'll be better off giving all objects a has_one to a model that contains that common configuration, then just validate any writes against the values you pre-define in config for that model
    – scrowler
    Jan 24, 2017 at 5:51

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