16 апреля 2012 г. 16:09 пользователь Tom Boutell <t...@punkave.com> написал:

> These tools already strip <?php tags, they would need minimal changes to
> support rolling in a .phpp file unmodified. Unless I am missing something?
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
> On Apr 15, 2012, at 5:30 PM, Arvids Godjuks <arvids.godj...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
> > I posted the bellow text in other thread, but i should have it post here,
> > so i'm reposting it to this thread.
> >
> > Well, it's time for me to remind about the techique many use (and some
> > frameworks provide it out of the box) - the application file
> concatination
> > to speed up file loading.
> > Yii framework provides a Yiilite.php file for this, that includes mostly
> > used core classes in one big file.that loads much faster and is used for
> > production. Any other framework has user extentions or other type of
> > solutions for this to speed up the application, and it makes really big
> > difference.
> > So there is a good question - how the hell in a MVC framework would i
> > combine my models, controllers, components and other stuff that will
> > definetly be as in .php so in .pphp. And not every file will be cached
> like
> > that - some will remain as distinct files even in production.
> >
> > The further discussion goes the more questions there is and less answers
> > there are.
>

Yes they obviously do, but that's not what I'm concerned about.
What I'm concerned is that code from .php and .pphp files get's mixed in
together - template engine related stuff is used as much, as do
controllers, session handling classes and bunch of other stuff that by
definition is .pphp stuff, but the template stuff is .php and it includes
templates. So basically everything just has to fall back to the embedded
PHP mode to work and we have no gain from the proposal what so ever - it
just becomes useless.

That's not counting other issues that people and I have been voicing and to
be honest, I never saw a reply to any of it. Maybe there is a reply to
all those questions, but they are under wall of text that usually goes in
reply - that just discourages to read it at all.

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