That's neat. I've always wondered why Zend_Db_Table is an abstract class
extending another abstract class while not adding any new methods.

   -- Mon


On Wed, Jul 15, 2009 at 9:49 PM, Ralph Schindler
<[email protected]>wrote:

> Hello all!
>
> I have commited to trunk a new feature for Zend_Db_Table that will be in ZF
> 1.9.  That feature is the ability to use concrete instantiation on tables.
>  What does that mean?  It means this is possible:
>
> $authorTable = new Zend_Db_Table('author');
> $authors = $authorTable->fetchAll();
> foreach ($authors as $author) {
>    echo $author->id . ': '
>        . $author->first_name . ' '
>        . $author->last_name . PHP_EOL;
> }
>
> On the more complex side, you are able to define a definition that would
> house all the same rules you previously had to define your Zend_Db_Table
> inherited classes with.
>
> Without going into the gory details, please see this url below for all of
> the working use cases I have attempted to solve:
>
>
> http://framework.zend.com/svn/framework/standard/branches/user/ralph/ZendDbTable/scripts/
>
> You are free to check out that folder from svn, and run and play with those
> scripts.  There is a complete sqlite database, and the bootstrap for that
> mini set of script will recreate the sqlite file database on each run.
>
> The only use case which is deprecated as of 1.9 will be if you are
> extending Zend_Db_Table (not Zend_Db_Table_Abstract), and are attempting to
> instantiate the class via a string, where the string represents the key name
> in the registry of the database adapter.  Since Zend_Db_Table has been
> deprecated since 0.9, I don't this should be a problem for anyone.
>
> Please test out this new feature, and report back any issues to me.
>
> Thanks & Happy ZF'ing!
>
> -ralph
>

Reply via email to