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Edited existing content, sketched out "Creating Your Own Behavior"

Undoubtedly will need to update “Creating Your Own Behavior” to reflect
changes in Yii 2.
tags/2.0.0-beta
Larry Ullman 11 years ago
parent
commit
9edeb37e53
  1. 67
      docs/guide/behaviors.md

67
docs/guide/behaviors.md

@ -1,16 +1,16 @@
Behaviors
=========
A behavior (also knows as mixin) can be used to enhance the functionality of an existing component without modifying its
code. In particular, it can "inject" its own methods and properties into the component and make them directly accessible
via the component. It can also respond to the events triggered in the component and thus intercept the normal
code execution. Unlike PHP traits, behaviors could be attached to classes at runtime.
A behavior (also knows as *mixin*) can be used to enhance the functionality of an existing component without modifying the component's
code. In particular, a behavior can "inject" its own methods and properties into the component, making them directly accessible
via the component itslef. A behavior can also respond to events triggered in the component, thus intercepting the normal
code execution. Unlike [PHP's traits](http://www.php.net/traits), behaviors can be attached to classes at runtime.
Using behaviors
---------------
Behavior can be attached to any class that extends from `Component`. In order to do so you need to implement `behaviors`
method. Yii provides `AutoTimestamp` behavior that handles updating timestamp fields on saving active record model.
A behavior can be attached to any class that extends from `Component`. In order to attach a behavior to a class, the component class must implement the `behaviors`
method. As an example, Yii provides the `AutoTimestamp` behavior for automatically updating timestamp fields when saving an Active Record model:
```php
class User extends ActiveRecord
@ -32,10 +32,59 @@ class User extends ActiveRecord
}
```
In the above `class` value is a string containing fully qualified behavior class name. All the other key-values are
assigned to corresponding properties of the class.
In the above, the `class` value is a string representing the fully qualified behavior class name. All of the other key-value pairs represent corresponding public properties of the `AutoTimestamp` class, thereby customizing how the behavior functions.
Creating your own behaviors
---------------------------
TBD
[[NEEDS UPDATING FOR Yii 2]]
To create your own behavior, you must define a class that implements the `IBehavior` interface. This can be accomplished by extending `CBehavior`. More specifically, you can extend `CModelBehavior` or `CActiveRecordBehavior` for behaviors to be used specifically with models or with Active Record models.
```php
class MyBehavior extends CActiveRecordBehavior
{
}
```
To make your behavior customizable, like `AutoTimestamp`, add public properties:
```php
class MyBehavior extends CActiveRecordBehavior
{
public $attr;
}
```
Now, when the behavior is used, you can set the attribute to which you'd want the behavior to be applied:
```php
class User extends ActiveRecord
{
// ...
public function behaviors()
{
return [
'mybehavior' => [
'class' => 'ext\mybehavior\MyBehavior',
'attr' => 'member_type'
],
],
];
}
}
```
Behaviors are normally written to take action when certain model-related events occur, such as `beforeSave` or `afterFind`. You can write your behaviors to have the corresponding method. Within the method, you can access the model instance through `$this->getOwner()`:
```php
class MyBehavior extends CActiveRecordBehavior
{
public $attr;
public function beforeSave() {
$model = $this->getOwner();
// Use $model->$attr
}
}
```
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