| Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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in order to follow the convention that controllers that refer to a collection of resources have plural names.
* Added a bug workaround to routes.php
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refer to collections should now have plural names and there should be only one controller per resource. Updated existing classes that implement REST_Controller. The routing now works like this:
GET /controller -> controller::_index()
POST /controller -> controller::_create()
GET /controller/id -> controller::_show()
PUT /controller/id -> controller::_update()
DELETE /controller/id -> controller::_delete()
GET /form/edit/controller/resource_id -> controller::_form()
GET /form/add/controller/data -> controller::_form()
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XML to the comment controllers as a proof of concept. It's not fully
baked; we should examine ways to create helpers to make this process
easier.
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print it out.
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1) Changed the way that we get forms. Now, if you want to get a form
for a REST resource you prefix /form to the resource id. So:
/form/photo/1 : returns a form for editing photo id 1
/form/comments/1 : returns a form for adding a comment to photo id 1
/form/comment/1 : returns a form for editing comment id 1
2) Changed the comment module to have two controllers:
comment: deals with a single comment resource
comments: deal with collections of comments attached to an item
Related stuff:
- Moved the comments js into the theme
- Reworked Comment_Helper for clarity
- Moved form generation code down into Comment_Helper
- Cleaned up routes (eliminating new comment ones added in recent rev)
- Added form() function to all REST controllers
- Changed comment module to use a block instead of an arbitrary helper call from the theme
- Comment controller only returns HTML currently, but returns a 201 Created status
code when a new comment is added, which the Ajax code can catch and act upon.
- Got rid of a lot of extra views in comment module
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variable; change the header so it links to the user controllers; and add the user controllers which don't do anything.
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_put(), _delete().
This should make it more obvious that these are not your typical
routes, simplifies overall routing by removing a rule and removes the
possibility of accidentally leaking information if we route to one of
them by accident.
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controllers. Any controller that wants to act RESTful can extend this
class and implement get/post/put/delete.
Tweak default routes to disallow direct access to the REST controller
and direct access to any REST methods.
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do anything else. Just got tire of my changes being clobbered :-)
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Create Item_Controller as a common superclass for Album_Controller and
Photo_Controller. Change routes to route requests to Item_Controller
for dispatching, which in turn will generate get/post/put/delete
requests to the controlller so that each controller has a RESTful
surface.
Change in_place editing to take advantage of this.
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Implement a real breadcrumb.
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