I see you are using controller_*****
and model_*****
as a class naming convention.
I read a fantastic article, which suggests an alternative naming convention using php's namespace
.
I love this solution because it doesn't matter where I put my classes. The __autoload
will find it no matter where it is in my file structure. It also allows me to call my classes whatever I want. I don't need a class naming convention for my code to work.
You can, for example, set up your folder structure like:
- application/
- controllers/
- models/
Your classes can be set up like this:
<?php
namespace applicationcontrollers;
class Base {...}
and:
<?php
namespace applicationmodels;
class Page {...}
The autoloader could look like this (or see 'a note on autoloading' at the end):
function __autoload($className) {
$file = $className . '.php';
if(file_exists($file)) {
require_once $file;
}
}
Then... you can call classes in three ways:
$controller = new applicationcontrollersBase();
$model = new applicationmodelsPage();
or,
<?php
use applicationcontrollers as Controller;
use applicationmodels as Model;
...
$controller = new ControllerBase();
$model = new ModelPage();
or,
<?php
use applicationcontrollersBase;
use applicationmodelsPage;
...
$controller = new Base();
$model = new Page();
EDIT - a note on autoloading:
My main auto loader looks like this:
// autoload classes based on a 1:1 mapping from namespace to directory structure.
spl_autoload_register(function ($className) {
# Usually I would just concatenate directly to $file variable below
# this is just for easy viewing on Stack Overflow)
$ds = DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR;
$dir = __DIR__;
// replace namespace separator with directory separator (prolly not required)
$className = str_replace('\', $ds, $className);
// get full name of file containing the required class
$file = "{$dir}{$ds}{$className}.php";
// get file if it is readable
if (is_readable($file)) require_once $file;
});
This autoloader is a direct 1:1 mapping of class name to directory structure; the namespace is the directory path and the class name is the file name. So the class applicationcontrollersBase()
defined above would load the file www/application/controllers/Base.php
.
I put the autoloader into a file, bootstrap.php, which is in my root directory. This can either be included directly, or php.ini can be modified to auto_prepend_file so that it is included automatically on every request.
By using spl_autoload_register you can register multiple autoload functions to load the class files any which way you want. Ie, you could put some or all of your classes in one directory, or you could put some or all of your namespaced classes in the one file. Very flexible :)