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PHP 7 Programming Cookbook

You're reading from   PHP 7 Programming Cookbook Over 80 recipes that will take your PHP 7 web development skills to the next level!

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785883446
Length 610 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Doug Bierer Doug Bierer
Author Profile Icon Doug Bierer
Doug Bierer
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Toc

Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Building a Foundation FREE CHAPTER 2. Using PHP 7 High Performance Features 3. Working with PHP Functional Programming 4. Working with PHP Object-Oriented Programming 5. Interacting with a Database 6. Building Scalable Websites 7. Accessing Web Services 8. Working with Date/Time and International Aspects 9. Developing Middleware 10. Looking at Advanced Algorithms 11. Implementing Software Design Patterns 12. Improving Web Security 13. Best Practices, Testing, and Debugging A. Defining PSR-7 Classes Index

Handling pagination


Pagination involves providing a limited subset of the results of a database query. This is usually done for display purposes, but could easily apply to other situations. At first glance, it would seem the LimitIterator class is ideally suited for the purposes of pagination. In cases where the potential result set could be massive; however, LimitIterator is not such an ideal candidate, as you would need to supply the entire result set as an inner iterator, which would most likely exceed memory limitations. The second and third arguments to the LimitIterator class constructor are offset and count. This suggests the pagination solution we will adopt, which is native to SQL: adding LIMIT and OFFSET clauses to a given SQL statement.

How to do it...

  1. First, we create a class called Application\Database\Paginate to hold the pagination logic. We add properties to represent values associated with pagination, $sql, $page, and $linesPerPage:

    namespace Application\Database;
    
    class Paginate...
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