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minor doc update.

tags/2.0.0-beta
Qiang Xue 12 years ago
parent
commit
ea9949c729
  1. 2
      docs/guide/bootstrap.md
  2. 2
      docs/guide/index.md
  3. 2
      docs/guide/installation.md
  4. 28
      docs/guide/model.md
  5. 2
      docs/guide/mvc.md

2
docs/guide/bootstrap.md

@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ Bootstrap with Yii
Yii provides a few ready-to-use application templates. Based on your needs, you may
choose one of them to bootstrap your project.
In following, we describe how to get started with the "Yii 2 Basic Application Template".
In the following, we describe how to get started with the "Yii 2 Basic Application Template".
### Install via Composer

2
docs/guide/index.md

@ -14,9 +14,9 @@ Base concepts
=============
- [MVC Overview](mvc.md)
- [Controller](controller.md)
- [Model](model.md)
- [View](view.md)
- [Controller](controller.md)
- [Application](application.md)
Database

2
docs/guide/installation.md

@ -24,7 +24,7 @@ script via the following URL in a Web browser:
http://hostname/path/to/yii/requirements/index.php
~~~
Yii requires PHP 5.3, so the server must have PHP 5.3 or above installed and
Yii requires PHP 5.3.7, so the server must have PHP 5.3.7 or above installed and
available to the web server. Yii has been tested with [Apache HTTP server](http://httpd.apache.org/)
on Windows and Linux. It may also run on other Web servers and platforms,
provided PHP 5.3 is supported.

28
docs/guide/model.md

@ -27,8 +27,8 @@ echo $post->title;
echo $post->content;
```
Since model implements [ArrayAccess](http://php.net/manual/en/class.arrayaccess.php) interface you can use it
as if it was an array:
Since [[\yii\base\Model|Model]] implements the [ArrayAccess](http://php.net/manual/en/class.arrayaccess.php) interface,
you can also access the attributes like accessing array elements:
```php
$post = new Post;
@ -38,8 +38,9 @@ echo $post['title'];
echo $post['content'];
```
Default model implementation has a strict rule that all its attributes should be explicitly declared as public and
non-static class properties such as the following:
By default, [[\yii\base\Model|Model]] requires that attributes be declared as *public* and *non-static*
class member variables. In the following example, the `LoginForm` model class declares two attributes:
`username` and `password`.
```php
// LoginForm has two attributes: username and password
@ -50,17 +51,22 @@ class LoginForm extends \yii\base\Model
}
```
In order to change this, you can override `attributes()` method that returns a list of model attribute names.
Derived model classes may use different ways to declare attributes by overriding the [[\yii\base\Model::attributes()|attributes()]]
method. For example, [[\yii\db\ActiveRecord]] defines attributes as the column names of the database table
that is associated with the class.
Attribute labels
Attribute Labels
----------------
Attribute labels are mainly used for display purpose. For example, given an attribute `firstName`, we can declare
a label `First Name` which is more user-friendly and can be displayed to end users for example as a form label.
a label `First Name` which is more user-friendly and can be displayed to end users in places such as form labels,
error messages. Given an attribute name, you can obtain its label by calling [[\yii\base\Model::getAttributeLabel()]].
By default an attribute label is generated using [[\yii\base\Model\generateAttributeLabel()]] but the better way is to
specify it explicitly like the following:
To declare attribute labels, you should override the [[\yii\base\Model::attributeLabels()]] method and return
a mapping from attribute names to attribute labels, like shown in the example below. If an attribute is not found
in this mapping, its label will be generated using the [[\yii\base\Model::generateAttributeLabel()]] method, which
in many cases, will generate reasonable labels (e.g. `username` to `Username`, `orderNumber` to `Order Number`).
```php
// LoginForm has two attributes: username and password
@ -71,7 +77,7 @@ class LoginForm extends \yii\base\Model
public function attributeLabels()
{
reuturn array(
return array(
'username' => 'Your name',
'password' => 'Your password',
);
@ -85,7 +91,7 @@ Scenarios
A model may be used in different scenarios. For example, a `User` model may be used to collect user login inputs,
and it may also be used for user registration purpose. For this reason, each model has a property named `scenario`
which stores the name of the scenario that the model is currently being used in. As we will explain in the next
few sections, the concept of scenario is mainly used for validation and massive attribute assignment.
few sections, the concept of scenario is mainly used for data validation and massive attribute assignment.
Associated with each scenario is a list of attributes that are *active* in that particular scenario. For example,
in the `login` scenario, only the `username` and `password` attributes are active; while in the `register` scenario,

2
docs/guide/mvc.md

@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ of the user interface such as text, form inputs; and the controller manages
the communication between the model and the view.
Besides implementing MVC, Yii also introduces a front-controller, called
`Application`, which encapsulates the execution context for the processing
`application`, which encapsulates the execution context for the processing
of a request. Application collects information about a user request and
then dispatches it to an appropriate controller for further handling.

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