Six PHP Essentials You Can’t Live Without

PHP, or PHP: Hypertext Preprocessor, is a versatile Web programming language that stands behind some of the world’s largest Web sites. While the designers of the language have been the target of criticism pertaining to both security and usability, PHP has nonetheless evolved into one of the most extensible and popular languages powering the Web today.

Here are six of the PHP classes, extensions, and libraries that no developer should be forced to live without!

ADOdb

http://adodb.sourceforge.net/

For development work that involves the use of a database, ADOdb is a must. This fast, mature, and portable database abstraction library provides much needed coherence, especially for those who have standardized on PHP 4. ADOdb includes support for MS SQL, MySQL, Oracle, and PostgreSQL, among many others.

Tip: Replace the standard MySQL functions in PHP 4 with ADOdb. You’ll thank yourself later.

Mcrypt and Mhash

http://www.php.net/mcrypt and http://www.php.net/mhash

These interfaces, which I’ve decided to present collectively, provide excellent support for strong encryption and various hash algorithms through Mcrypt and Mhash. Although both extensions were technically included with PHP until version 5.3.0, many installations of PHP are compiled without support for them, and relatively few users seem to be aware that these outstanding development tools exist.

Tip: Use these extensions to easily replace several broken or obsolete algorithms that are supported natively by PHP.

PHP-Imagick

http://pecl.php.net/package/imagick

It’s no secret to many PHP developers that the integrated support for GD has a number of serious limitations. ImageMagick is frequently regarded as the most comprehensive and powerful image manipulation suite, but many PHP developers are unaware that support exists for it. As it turns out, an extension by the name of PHP-Imagick provides an excellent alternative to the integrated GD functions.

Tip: Use PHP-Imagick to avoid roadblocks — for example, lossy thumbnails — when working with high resolution images.

PHPMailer

http://phpmailer.sourceforge.net/

As far as the mail() function is concerned, “quirky” is a vast understatement. Many critics and developers alike would argue that PHP allows you just enough rope to hang yourself and your users.

Fortunately, an alternative e-mail class exists in the form of PHPMailer, and it provides very clean, refined support for electronic mail. Its feature set includes SMTP redundancy, SMTP authentication, support for HTML, support for embedded images, and much more.

Tip: Combine PHPMailer with Smarty (see below) for a powerful e-mail template system.

SAJAX

http://www.modernmethod.com/sajax/

AJAX, short for Asynchronous JavaScript and XML, is a buzzword that describes a method by which interactive Web applications are created. It takes advantage of the XMLHttpRequest object, which allows an application to push or request content without refreshing the page.

Due to small variations in how the XMLHttpRequest object has been implemented by the various browser manufacturers, it can be tedious and time-consuming to roll your own AJAX implementation. Fortunately, SAJAX provides a straightforward framework upon which to build an AJAX application, saving precious development time.

Tip: Keep in mind that there are caveats to AJAX. For example, it’s easy to break browser navigation or make your application inaccessible to search engine spiders, so use it with caution.

Smarty

http://smarty.php.net/

It’s always best to separate your code from your content. Smarty, one of the best template engines for PHP, is built to serve that purpose, as well as many others.

It provides an excellent framework upon which to standardize your templates. Additionally, with its advanced support for caching, Smarty often proves itself more efficient than the competition. If you’re thinking about rolling out your own template engine, consider saving yourself some time by adopting Smarty.

3 Responses to “Six PHP Essentials You Can’t Live Without”

  1. 0430b2faa05e4618629ed73bb05b51ab Says:

    0430b2faa05e4618629ed73bb05b51ab

    0430b2faa05e4618629ed73bb05b51ab

  2. AMAZING tips for PHP!!!!! « See the Post Says:

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  3. PHP Web Development Malta Says:

    When it comes to image manipulation with PHP, IMagick is still in experimental stage.
    I prefer using MagickWand for PHP as it is natural PHP API for ImageMagick. The issue here might be the limitation with the hosting service if you are on shared hosting, as there are minimum requirements that have to be met to use MagickWand and ImageMagick. If you get those to work, sky is the limit for image manipulation. You can do everything you can normally do with the command line in ImageMagick, including changing the color space, e.g from Adobe RGB to sRGB.
    There is another good library, Asido. If you need basic things, like reasizing and watermerking, Asidi is great and easy to use.
    Cheers!

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