At some point you may run across a data type that is not covered by the packaged adapters. In this case, you will need to write your own.
To do so, you must implement
Zend_Paginator_Adapter_Interface
. There are two
methods required to do this:
count()
getItems($offset, $itemCountPerPage)
Additionally, you'll want to implement a constructor that takes your data source as a parameter and stores it as a protected or private property. How you wish to go about doing this specifically is up to you.
If you've ever used the SPL interface
Countable
,
you're familiar with count()
. As used with
Zend_Paginator
, this is the total number of items
in the data collection.
Additionally, the Zend_Paginator
instance provides a method
countAllItems()
that proxies to the adapter
count()
method.
The getItems()
method is only slightly more
complicated. For this, your adapter is supplied with an offset and
the number of items to display per page. You must return the
appropriate slice of data. For an array, that would be:
return array_slice($this->_array, $offset, $itemCountPerPage);
Take a look at the packaged adapters (all of which implement the
Zend_Paginator_Adapter_Interface
) for ideas of how you
might go about implementing your own.
Creating your own scrolling style requires that you implement
Zend_Paginator_ScrollingStyle_Interface
, which defines
a single method, getPages()
. Specifically,
public function getPages(Zend_Paginator $paginator, $pageRange = null);
This method should calculate a lower and upper bound for page numbers within the range of so-called "local" pages (that is, pages that are nearby the current page).
Unless it extends another scrolling style (see
Zend_Paginator_ScrollingStyle_Elastic
for an example),
your custom scrolling style will inevitably end with something
similar to the following line of code:
return $paginator->getPagesInRange($lowerBound, $upperBound);
There's nothing special about this call; it's merely a convenience method to check the validity of the lower and upper bound and return an array of the range to the paginator.
When you're ready to use your new scrolling style, you'll need to
tell Zend_Paginator
what directory to look in. To do
that, do the following:
$prefix = 'My_Paginator_ScrollingStyle'; $path = 'My/Paginator/ScrollingStyle/'; Zend_Paginator::addScrollingStylePrefixPath($prefix, $path);
Zend_Paginator
can be told to cache the data it has already
passed on, preventing the adapter from fetching them each time they are used.
To tell paginator to automatically cache the adapter's data, just pass to
its setCache()
method a Zend_Cache_Core
instance.
$paginator = Zend_Paginator::factory($someData); $fO = array('lifetime' => 3600, 'automatic_serialization' => true); $bO = array('cache_dir'=>'/tmp'); $cache = Zend_cache::factory('Core', 'File', $fO, $bO); Zend_Paginator::setCache($cache);
As far as Zend_Paginator
has got a Zend_Cache_Core
instance, data will
be cached. Sometimes you would like not to cache data even if you already passed
a cache instance. You should then use setCacheEnable()
for that.
$paginator = Zend_Paginator::factory($someData); // $cache is a Zend_Cache_Core instance Zend_Paginator::setCache($cache); // ... later on the script $paginator->setCacheEnable(false); // cache is now disabled
When a cache is set, data are automatically stored in it and pulled out from
it. It then can be useful to empty the cache manually. You can get this done by
calling clearPageItemCache($pageNumber)
.
If you don't pass any parameter, the whole cache will be empty. You can optionally
pass a parameter representing the page number to empty in the cache:
$paginator = Zend_Paginator::factory($someData); Zend_Paginator::setCache($cache); $items = $paginator->getCurrentItems(); // page 1 is now in cache $page3Items = $paginator->getItemsByPage(3); // page 3 is now in cache // clear the cache of the results for page 3 $paginator->clearPageItemCache(3); // clear all the cache data $paginator->clearPageItemCache();
Changing the item count per page will empty the whole cache as it would have become invalid:
$paginator = Zend_Paginator::factory($someData); Zend_Paginator::setCache($cache); // fetch some items $items = $paginator->getCurrentItems(); // all the cache data will be flushed: $paginator->setItemCountPerPage(2);
It is also possible to see the data in cache and ask for them directly.
getPageItemCache()
can be used for that:
$paginator = Zend_Paginator::factory($someData); $paginator->setItemCountPerPage(3); Zend_Paginator::setCache($cache); // fetch some items $items = $paginator->getCurrentItems(); $otherItems = $paginator->getItemsPerPage(4); // see the cached items as a two-dimension array: var_dump($paginator->getPageItemCache());