8

What I'd like is to see the ideal framework for a system which has a group of objects (ie User) whereby the data is contained in a database. I've been advised to have a User class and a UserMapper class and this is my understanding of how it should look:

user.class.php

/* The class for constructing any user's information
 */

    class User {

        protected $userId, $email, $userGroup;

        protected function getEmail() {
            return $this->email;
        }

        protected function getUserId() {
            return $this->userId;
        }


        public function __construct($userId, $email, $userGroup) {
            $this->userId = $userId;
            $this->email = $email;
            $this->userGroup = $userGroup;
        }

    }

    class UserMapper {
        // database connection
        private $db;

        public function __construct($db)
        {
            $this->db = $db;
        }

        public function findByUserId ($userId) {
            $userObject = new User();
            $q = $this->db->prepare("SELECT userId, email, userGroup FROM user WHERE userId = :userId");
            $q->bindValue(":userId", $id);
            $q->setFetchMode( PDO::FETCH_INTO, $userObject);
            $q->execute();
            $q->fetch(PDO::FETCH_INTO);
            return $userObject;

        }
    }   
?>

main.php

<?php  
    include user.class.php;
    $dbh = new PDO('mysql:host=localhost;dbname=test', $user, $pass, array(PDO::ATTR_PERSISTENT => true));
    $getUser = new UserMapper($dbh);
    $user = $getUser->findByUserId(41);
    echo $user->getEmail();
?>

But this seems a bit messy in terms of the main.php side. Can I not make one PDO object and have that defined in all of my scripts? As well as a UserMapper object? Or do every time I want to get a user from the database do I need to make a NEW userMapper object, then do findByUserId (as above). Or is there a simpler way to doing this?

If I wanted to call a UserGroup object within the class User, how would I do this? (This would also need to connect to the database through PDO). To do the following seems messy:

<?php
       $dbh = new PDO('mysql:host=localhost;dbname=test', $user, $pass, array(PDO::ATTR_PERSISTENT => true));
        $getUserGroup = new UserGroupMapper($dbh);
        $userGroup = $getUserGroupMapper->findByUserId($this->userGroup);
?>
2

3 Answers 3

1

one thing that i can think of is making this class a singleton, and create the $user above the declaration of the class, so whenever you include this class you'll have that user object.

1

Can I not make one PDO object and have that defined in all of my scripts? As well as a UserMapper object?

You're actually looking for a Front Controller.

That is, in order to avoid the same instantiation of the same classes, you should have prepared them. Most people usually do this in bootstrap.php, that "tweaks" all required dependencies.

But a front controller implementation also includes a dispatcher and a router. I won't go deep into this, but focus on the problem you're trying to solve instead.

Factory pattern

It basically abstracts instantiation logic. The benefits are: 1) you can delay object instantiation 2) You avoid global state, which is bad for unit-testing. The simplified version of it would look like as:

class UserFactory
{
   private $pdo;

   private $cache = array();

   public function __construct($pdo)
   {
      $this->pdo = $pdo;
   }

   public function build($mapper)
   {
      if (isset($this->cache[$mapper])) {
         return $this->cache[$mapper];
      } else {
         // Inject an instance into a mapper
         $instance = new $mapper($this->pdo);
         // Save the state into a cache
         $this->cache[get_class($instance)] = $instance;
         return $instance;
      }
   }
}

And finally

A very simplified version of bootstrap-er would look like as,

<?php

/* File : bootstrap.php */

$dbh = new PDO('mysql:host=localhost;dbname=test', $user, $pass, array(PDO::ATTR_PERSISTENT => true));

// Include here UserFactory class
$userFactory = new UserFactory($dbh);

// Its kinda ready to be used

You would simply include in all scripts that need to access Users

<?php

/* File: main.php */
include(__DIR__ . '/bootstrap.php');

$getUser = $userFactory->build('UserMapper');
$user    = $getUser->findByUserId(41);

echo $user->getEmail();
1

You need to use FETCH_CLASS instead and you don't need a userMapper just extend PDO then set the right fetch mode all in one class.

Don't forget to make the class definition available or use an autoloader

$this->statement->setFetchMode(PDO::FETCH_CLASS|PDO::FETCH_PROPS_LATE,"className");

FETCH_PROPS_LATE is there to get the constructor fired first in your class But you don't need a constructor in your case so just lose it. If you decide to keep it though than you should take a look here first.

Hope this helps good luck

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