class App

App is a mandatory object that’s essential for PHPControls to operate. If you don’t create App object explicitly, it will be automatically created if you execute $component->init() or $component->render().

In most use-scenarios, however, you would create instance of an App class yourself before other Controls:

$app = new \phpctrl\ui\App('My App');
$app->initLayout('Centered');
$app->layout->add('LoremIpsum');

Purpose of App class

As you add one component into another, they will automatically inherit reference to App class. App class is an ideal place to have all your environment configured and all the dependencies defined that other parts of your applications may require.

Most standard classes, however, will refrain from having too much asumptions about the App class, to keep overal code portable.

There may be some cases, when it’s necessary to have multiple $app objects, for example if you are executing unit-tests, you may want to create new App instance. If your application encounters exception, it will catch it and create a new App instance to display error message ensuring that the error is not repeated.

Using App for Injecting Depedencies

Since App class becomes available for all objects and Controls of PHPControls, you may add properties into the App class:

$app->db = new \phpctrl\ui\Persistence_SQL($dsn);

// later anywhere in the code:

$m = new MyModel($this->app->db);

Important

$app->db is NOT a standard property. If you use this property, that’s your own convention.

Using App for Injecting Behaviour

You may use App class hook to impact behaviour of your application:

  • using hooks to globally impact object initialization
  • override methods to create different behaviour, for example url() method may use advanced router logic to create beautiful URLs.
  • you may re-define set-up of PersistenceUI and affect how data is loaded from UI.
  • load templates from different files
  • use a different CDN settings for static files

Using App as Initializer Object

App class may initialize some resources for you including user authentication and work with session. My next example defines property $user and $system for the app class to indicate a system which is currently active. (See system_pattern):

class Warehouse extends \phpctrl\ui\App
{
    public $user;
    public $company;

    function __construct($auth = true) {
        parent::__construct('Warehouse App v0.4');

        // My App class will establish database connection
        $this->db = new \phpctrl\data\Persistence_SQL($_CLEARDB_DATABASE_URL['DSN']);
        $this->db->app = $this;

        // My App class provides access to a currently logged user and currently selected system.
        $this->user = new User($this->db);
        $this->company = new Company($this->db);
        session_start();

        // App class may be used for pages that do not require authentication
        if (!$auth) {
            $this->initLayout('Centered');
            return;
        }

        // Load User from database based on session data
        if (isset($_SESSION['user_id'])) {
            $this->user->tryLoad($_SESSION['user_id']);
        }

        // Make sure user is valid
        if(!$this->user->loaded()) {
            $this->initLayout('Centered');
            $this->layout->add(['Message', 'Login Required', 'error']);
            $this->layout->add(['Button', 'Login', 'primary'])->link('index.php');
            exit;
        }

        // Load company data (System) for present user
        $this->company = $this->user->ref('company_id');

        $this->initLayout('Admin');

        // Add more initialization here, such as a populating menu.
    }
}

After declaring your Application class like this, you can use it conveniently anywhere:

include'vendor/autoload.php';
$app = new Warehouse();
$app->layout->add('CRUD')
    ->setModel($app->system->ref('Order'));

Quick Usage and Page pattern

A lot of the documentation for PHPControls uses a principle of initializing App object first, then, manually add the UI elements using a procedural approach:

$app->layout->add('HelloWorld');

There is another approach in which your application will determine which Page class should be used for executing the request, subsequently creating setting it up and letting it populate UI (This behaviour is similar to PHPControls prior to 4.3).

In PHPControls this pattern is implemented through a 3rd party add-on for page_manager and routing. See also App::url()

Clean-up and simplification

App::run()
property App::$run_called
property App::$is_rendering
property App::$always_run

App also does certain actions to simplify handling of the application. For instance, App class will render itself automatically at the end of the application, so you can safely add objects into the App without actually triggering a global execution process:

$app->layout->add('HelloWorld');

// Next line is optional
$app->run();

If you do not want the application to automatically execute run() you can either set $always_run to false or use terminate() to the app with desired output.

Exception handling

App::caugthException()
property App::$catch_exception

By default, App will also catch unhandled exceptions and will present them nicely to the user. If you have a better plan for exception, place your code inside a try-catch block.

When Exception is caught, it’s displayed using a ‘Centered’ layout and execution of original application is terminated.

Integration with other Frameworks

If you use PHPControls in conjunction with another framework, then you may be using a framework-specific App class, that implements tighter integration with the host application or full-stack framework.

App::requireJS()

Method to include additional JavaScript file in page:

$app->requireJS('https://code.jquery.com/jquery-3.1.1.js');
$app->requireJS('https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/semantic-ui/2.2.10/semantic.min.js');

Using of CDN servers is always better than storing external libraries locally. Most of the time CDN servers are faster (cached) and more reliable.

App::requireCSS($url)

Method to include additional CSS stylesheet in page:

$app->requireCSS('//semantic-ui.com/dist/semantic.css');
App::initIncludes()

Initializes all includes required by PHPControls. You may extend this class to add more includes.

App::getRequestURI()

Decodes current request without any arguments. If you are changing URL generation pattern, you probably need to change this method to properly identify the current page. See App::url()

Utilities by App

App provides various utilities that are used by other Controls.

App::getTag()
App::encodeAttribute()
App::encodeHTML()

Apart from basic utility, App class provides several mechanisms that are helpful for Controls.

Sticky GET Arguments

App::stickyGet()
App::stickyForget()

Problem: sometimes certain PHP code will only be executed when GET arguments are passed. For example, you may have a file detail.php which expects order_id parameter and would contain a CRUD component.

Since CRUD component is interractive, it may want to generate request to itself, but it must also include order_id otherwise the scope will be incomplete. PHPControls solves that with StickyGet arguments:

$order_id = $app->stickyGet('order_id');
$crud->setModel($order->load($order_id)->ref('Payment'));

This make sure that pagination, editing, addition or any other operation that CRUD implements will always address same model scope.

If you need to generate URL that respects stickyGet arguments, use App::url().

Execution Termination

App::terminate(output)

Used when application flow needs to be terminated preemptively. For example when call-back is triggered and need to respond with some JSON.

You can also use this method to output debug data. Here is comparison to var_dump:

// var_dump($my_var);  // does not stop execution, draws UI anyway

$this->app->terminate(var_export($my_var)); // stops execution.

Execution state

property App::$is_rendering

Will be true if the application is currently rendering recursively through the Render Tree.

Includes

App::requireJS($url)

Includes header into the <head> class that will load JavaScript file from a specified URL. This will be used by Controls that rely on external JavaScript libraries.

Hooks

Application implements HookTrait (hook.html) and the following hooks are available:

  • beforeRender
  • beforeOutput

Application and Layout

When writing an application that uses PHPControls you can either select to use individual Controls or make them part of a bigger layout. If you use the component individually, then it will at some point initialize internal ‘App’ class that will assist with various tasks.

Having composition of multiple Controls will allow them to share the app object:

$grid = new \phpctrl\ui\Grid();
$grid->setModel($user);
$grid->addPaginator();          // initialize and populare paginator
$grid->addButton('Test');       // initialize and populate toolbar

echo $grid->render();

All of the objects created above - button, grid, toolbar and paginator will share the same value for the ‘app’ property. This value is carried into new objects through AppScopeTrait (appscope.html).

Adding the App

You can create App object on your own then add elements into it:

$app = new App('My App');
$app->add($grid);

echo $grid->render();

This does not change the output, but you can use the ‘App’ class to your advantage as a “Property Bag” pattern to inject your configuration. You can even use a different “App” class altogether, which is how you can affect the default generation of links, reading of GET/POST data and more.

We are still not using the layout, however.

Adding the Layout

Layout can be initialized through the app like this:

$app->initLayout('Centered');

This will initialize two new views inside the app:

$app->html
$app->layout

The first view is a HTML boilerplate - containing HEAD / BODY tags but not the body contents. It is a standard html5 doctype template.

The layout will be selected based on your choice - ‘Centered’, ‘Admin’ etc. This will not only change the overal page outline, but will also introduce some additional views.

Going with the ‘Admin’ layout will populate some menu objects. Each layout may come with several views that you can populate:

$app->initLayout('Admin');

// Add item into menu
$app->layout->menu->addItem('User Admin', 'admin');

Integration with Legacy Apps

If you use PHPControls inside a legacy application, then you may already have layout and some patterns or limitations may be imposed on the app. Your first job would be to properly implement the “App” and either modification of your existing class or a new class.

Having a healthy “App” class will ensure that all of PHPControls Controls will perform properly.

3rd party Layouts

You should be able to find 3rd party Layout implementations that may even be coming with some custom templates and views. The concept of a “Theme” in PHPControls consists of offering of the following 3 things:

  • custom CSS build from Semantic UI
  • custom Layout(s) along with documentation
  • additional or tweaked Views

Unique layouts can be used to change the default look and as a stand-in replacement to some of standard layouts or as a new and entirely different layout.