From 9bc99e22b74ab44feb16f136d40f92d918855642 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: ploaiza Date: Tue, 28 May 2013 10:55:51 -0300 Subject: [PATCH] Fixed some wording --- docs/guide/upgrade-from-v1.md | 32 ++++++++++++++++---------------- 1 file changed, 16 insertions(+), 16 deletions(-) diff --git a/docs/guide/upgrade-from-v1.md b/docs/guide/upgrade-from-v1.md index b3d4411..ebfe94b 100644 --- a/docs/guide/upgrade-from-v1.md +++ b/docs/guide/upgrade-from-v1.md @@ -13,7 +13,7 @@ The most obvious change in Yii 2.0 is the use of namespaces. Almost every core c is namespaced, e.g., `yii\web\Request`. The "C" prefix is no longer used in class names. The naming of the namespaces follows the directory structure. For example, `yii\web\Request` indicates the corresponding class file is `web/Request.php` under the Yii framework folder. -You can use any core class without explicitly include that class file, thanks to the Yii +You can use any core class without explicitly including that class file, thanks to the Yii class loader. @@ -117,17 +117,17 @@ supported in most places in the Yii core code. For example, `FileCache::cachePat both a path alias and a normal directory path. Path alias is also closely related with class namespaces. It is recommended that a path -alias defined for each root namespace so that you can use Yii class autoloader without +alias be defined for each root namespace so that you can use Yii the class autoloader without any further configuration. For example, because `@yii` refers to the Yii installation directory, a class like `yii\web\Request` can be autoloaded by Yii. If you use a third party library -such as Zend Framework, you may define a path alias `@Zend` which refers to its installation directory. -And Yii will be able to autoload any class in this library. +such as Zend Framework, you may define a path alias `@Zend` which refers to its installation +directory and Yii will be able to autoload any class in this library. View ---- -Yii 2.0 introduces a `View` class to represent the view part in the MVC pattern. +Yii 2.0 introduces a `View` class to represent the view part of the MVC pattern. It can be configured globally through the "view" application component. It is also accessible in any view file via `$this`. This is one of the biggest changes compared to 1.1: **`$this` in a view file no longer refers to the controller or widget object.** @@ -159,7 +159,7 @@ extension for your Smarty views, or `twig` for Twig views. You may also configur Models ------ -A model is now associated with a form name returned its `formName()` method. This is +A model is now associated with a form name returned by its `formName()` method. This is mainly used when using HTML forms to collect user inputs for a model. Previously in 1.1, this is usually hardcoded as the class name of the model. @@ -235,7 +235,7 @@ Previously in 1.1, you would have to enter the widget class names as strings via Themes ------ -Theme works completely different in 2.0. It is now based on a path map to "translate" a source +Themes work completely different in 2.0. They are now based on a path map to "translate" a source view into a themed view. For example, if the path map for a theme is `array('/www/views' => '/www/themes/basic')`, then the themed version for a view file `/www/views/site/index.php` will be `/www/themes/basic/site/index.php`. @@ -250,7 +250,7 @@ application component. Console Applications -------------------- -Console applications are now composed by controllers, too, like Web applications. In fact, +Console applications are now composed by controllers, like Web applications. In fact, console controllers and Web controllers share the same base controller class. Each console controller is like `CConsoleCommand` in 1.1. It consists of one or several @@ -300,7 +300,7 @@ public function behaviors() Assets ------ -Yii 2.0 introduces a new concept called *asset bundle*. It is a bit similar to script +Yii 2.0 introduces a new concept called *asset bundle*. It is similar to script packages (managed by `CClientScript`) in 1.1, but with better support. An asset bundle is a collection of asset files (e.g. JavaScript files, CSS files, image files, etc.) @@ -315,7 +315,7 @@ Static Helpers Yii 2.0 introduces many commonly used static helper classes, such as `Html`, `ArrayHelper`, `StringHelper`. These classes are designed to be easily extended. Note that static classes -are usually hard to be extended because of the fixed class name references. But Yii 2.0 +are usually hard to extend because of the fixed class name references. But Yii 2.0 introduces the class map (via `Yii::$classMap`) to overcome this difficulty. @@ -343,7 +343,7 @@ Query Builder In 1.1, query building is scattered among several classes, including `CDbCommand`, `CDbCriteria`, and `CDbCommandBuilder`. Yii 2.0 uses `Query` to represent a DB query -and `QueryBuilder` to generate SQL statements from query objects. For example, +and `QueryBuilder` to generate SQL statements from query objects. For example: ```php $query = new \yii\db\Query; @@ -365,7 +365,7 @@ ActiveRecord ------------ ActiveRecord has undergone significant changes in Yii 2.0. The most important one -is about relational ActiveRecord query. In 1.1, you have to declare the relations +is the relational ActiveRecord query. In 1.1, you have to declare the relations in the `relations()` method. In 2.0, this is done via getter methods that return an `ActiveQuery` object. For example, the following method declares an "orders" relation: @@ -392,7 +392,7 @@ by filtering with the primary keys of the primary records. Yii 2.0 no longer uses the `model()` method when performing queries. Instead, you -use the `find()` method like the following: +use the `find()` method: ```php // to retrieve all *active* customers and order them by their ID: @@ -410,14 +410,14 @@ Therefore, you can use all query methods of `Query`. Instead of returning ActiveRecord objects, you may call `ActiveQuery::asArray()` to return results in terms of arrays. This is more efficient and is especially useful -when you need to return large number of records. For example, +when you need to return a large number of records: ```php $customers = Customer::find()->asArray()->all(); ``` By default, ActiveRecord now only saves dirty attributes. In 1.1, all attributes -would be saved to database when you call `save()`, regardless they are changed or not, +are saved to database when you call `save()`, regardless of having changed or not, unless you explicitly list the attributes to save. @@ -427,7 +427,7 @@ Auto-quoting Table and Column Names Yii 2.0 supports automatic quoting of database table and column names. A name enclosed within double curly brackets is treated as a table name, and a name enclosed within double square brackets is treated as a column name. They will be quoted according to -the database driver being used. For example, +the database driver being used: ```php $command = $connection->createCommand('SELECT [[id]] FROM {{posts}}');