In this PHP tutorial, you'll learn about namespaces and the use
statement in PHP.
In this PHP tutorial, learn about what an autoloader is and how you can use it to replace require
statements in your PHP applications.
In this PHP tutorial, learn how the use
statement works with the autoloader to replace the require
statements that we removed in a previous lesson.
In this PHP tutorial we'll continue our look at namespaces and how they work in PHP applications.
In this PHP tutorial we'll introduce Exceptions in PHP.
In this PHP tutorial, you'll learn about the different exception classes that are available to you use in your PHP applications.
In this tutorial, learn about PHP's built-in magic methods: __toString()
, __get()
, and __set()
.
In this tutorial, learn how to use PHP's built-in interface ArrayAccess
and when you might want to use it.
Additional resources
In this tutorial, learn how to implement PHP's built-in interface IteratorAggregate
to loop over an object.
In this PHP tutorial, we'll introduce Traits in PHP and how you can utilize them to reuse your code.
In modern PHP, you're going to spend a lot of time working with other people's classes: via external libraries that you bring into your project to get things done faster. Of course, when you do that: you can't actually edit their code if you need to change or add some behavior.
Fortunately, object-oriented code gives us some really neat ways to deal with this limitation. In this tutorial, you'll learn a method called composition in which we'll create a wrapper class, which has some subtle advantages over using inheritance.
Additional resources
Object-Oriented PHP (Topic) (Drupalize.Me)
Learn Drupal
GuideAs new major versions of Drupal are released, contributed modules need to be updated for compatibility. As of right now (October 2021) there are a lot of contributed modules with a Drupal 8 release and a patch in the queue to make them work with Drupal 9. However, there's no official Drupal 9 compatible release for the module, so the module can't be installed with Composer. This creates a circular problem where you can't composer require
the module if you don't patch it, but you can't patch it until after it's been downloaded by Composer.
To help solve this common issue, Drupal.org provides a lenient Composer endpoint that publishes all modules as compatible with Drupal 9 regardless of whether that's true or not. By using it, you can composer require
the module and then use cweagans/composer-patches
to apply any necessary patches.
In this tutorial we'll:
- Add the lenient Composer endpoint to our project's composer.json file
-
composer require
a non-Drupal 9 compatible module - Use Composer to download and apply a patch that makes the module Drupal 9 compatible
By the end of this tutorial you should be able to use contributed modules that require a patch to be compatible with Drupal 9.
Local task links are the tabs you see when logged in as an administrator viewing a node on a Drupal site. In this tutorial we'll take a look at how local tasks are added within a custom module. We'll also see how to alter local tasks provided by other modules via hook_menu_local_tasks_alter()
.