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-Pear Manual>
Table of contents
Copyright
Preface
About this manual
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I) About PEAR
 1. Introduction
 2 Installation
 3 Support
 4 Coding standards
 5 Contributing
 6 FAQ
II) Developer Guide
 7 Introduction
 8 PEAR's meaning for developers
 9 Contributing your own code
 10 The package definition file package.xml
 11 Releasing a package
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III) Core components
 13 PEAR base classes
 14 PPM classes
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 33 Payment
 34 PEAR
 35 PHP
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 39 XML
V) PECL packages
 I. Advance PHP debugger
 II. PHP bytecode compiler
 III. Imagick
 IV. KADM5
 V. Radius
 VI. Paradox file access
 VII. Satellite CORBA client extention
 VIII. PostgreSQL session save handler
 IX. Soap
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 XI. Net_Gopher
 XII. oggvorbis

-PHP-GTK Manual>
Table of contents
Copyright
Preface
PHP-GTK userguide
I) Introduction to PHP-GTK
 1. What is PHP-GTK?
 2. What is PHP?
 3. What is GTK+?
 4. Acknowledgements
II) Getting started
 1. Getting the lastest version
 2. Installing PHP-GTK under Windows
 3. Installing PHP-GTK under Unix
 4. How to use PHP-GTK
III) Basic elements
 1. Widgets & containers
 2. Signals & callbacks
PHP-GTK tutorials
I) Hello world tutorial
PHP-GTK reference
I) GTK classes
II) GDK clasesse
III) GTK enums
IV) GDK enums
V) Glade classes
VI) Scintilla classes
Appendix
I) PHP-GTK credits
II) PHP-GTK documentation credits
III) GNU free documentation license
IV) Symbolic names for keys in PHP-GTK
 
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Chapter 24. Overview

"Extending PHP" is easier said than done. PHP has evolved to a full-fledged tool consisting of a few megabytes of source code, and to hack a system like this quite a few things have to be learned and considered. When structuring this chapter, we finally decided on the "learn by doing" approach. This is not the most scientific and professional approach, but the method that's the most fun and gives the best end results. In the following sections, you'll learn quickly how to get the most basic extensions to work almost instantly. After that, you'll learn about Zend's advanced API functionality. The alternative would have been to try to impart the functionality, design, tips, tricks, etc. as a whole, all at once, thus giving a complete look at the big picture before doing anything practical. Although this is the "better" method, as no dirty hacks have to be made, it can be very frustrating as well as energy- and time-consuming, which is why we've decided on the direct approach.

Note that even though this chapter tries to impart as much knowledge as possible about the inner workings of PHP, it's impossible to really give a complete guide to extending PHP that works 100% of the time in all cases. PHP is such a huge and complex package that its inner workings can only be understood if you make yourself familiar with it by practicing, so we encourage you to work with the source.

What Is Zend? and What Is PHP?

The name Zend refers to the language engine, PHP's core. The term PHP refers to the complete system as it appears from the outside. This might sound a bit confusing at first, but it's not that complicated (see Figure 24-1). To implement a Web script interpreter, you need three parts:

  1. The interpreter part analyzes the input code, translates it, and executes it.

  2. The functionality part implements the functionality of the language (its functions, etc.).

  3. The interface part talks to the Web server, etc.

Zend takes part 1 completely and a bit of part 2; PHP takes parts 2 and 3. Together they form the complete PHP package. Zend itself really forms only the language core, implementing PHP at its very basics with some predefined functions. PHP contains all the modules that actually create the language's outstanding capabilities.

Figure 24-1. The internal structure of PHP.

The following sections discuss where PHP can be extended and how it's done.

 
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