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PHP 5 CMS Framework Development - 2nd Edition

You're reading from   PHP 5 CMS Framework Development - 2nd Edition For professional PHP developers, this is the perfect guide to web-oriented frameworks and content management systems. Covers all the critical design issues and programming techniques in an easy-to-follow style and structure.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2010
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849511346
Length 416 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Martin Brampton Martin Brampton
Author Profile Icon Martin Brampton
Martin Brampton
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Table of Contents (24) Chapters Close

PHP 5 CMS Framework Development
Second Edition
Credits
About the Author
1. Acknowledgement
About the Reviewers
2. Preface
1. CMS Architecture FREE CHAPTER 2. Organizing Code 3. Database and Data Objects 4. Administrators, Users, and Guests 5. Sessions and Users 6. Caches and Handlers 7. Access Control 8. Handling Extensions 9. Menus 10. Languages 11. Presentation Services 12. Other Services 13. SEF and RESTful Services 14. Error Handling 15. Real Content Packaging Extensions
Packaging XML Example

Summary


We have seen how a CMS will contain many objects that represent elements of the system, such as extensions to the core logic. Rather than adopting a piecemeal approach to handling these relatively small but important groups, we can gain efficiency by building specialized handlers. The handlers build data structures out of information from the database, but we can make further gains by storing the information in a cache so that it can be quickly and easily retrieved in many instances. The cache provides a means of saving useful data that can be reused.

Having settled on the use of cache, it was clear that the principle could be applied more widely, especially to saving the XHTML that is generated and sent to the client browser. When the underlying data is slow moving, the XHTML can be constructed once, and then subsequent requests can be served from the cache. After some time, the information is liable to become out of date, so the cache is refreshed.

Although cached handlers and XHTML...

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