The Cookbook»1.2 Collection»The Manual»Developing with CakePHP»Controllers»Controller Attributes»$name
{52} - 3.5.2.1 $name
{5216} - 3.5.2.1 $name
PHP4 users should start out their controller definitions using the $name attribute. The $name attribute should be set to the name of the controller. Usually this is just the plural form of the primary model the controller uses. This takes care of some PHP4 classname oddities and helps CakePHP resolve naming.
<?php
# $name controller attribute usage example
class RecipesController extends AppController {
var $name = 'Recipes';
}
?>
<?php# $name controller attribute usage exampleclass RecipesController extends AppController {var $name = 'Recipes';}?>
Differences
| Lines: 1-2 | Lines: 1-14 | ||
| <title>$name</title> | <title>$name</title> | ||
| + | <p>PHP4 users should start out their controller definitions using the <code>$name</code> attribute. The <code>$name</code> attribute should be set to the name of the controller. Usually this is just the plural form of the primary model the controller uses. This takes care of some PHP4 classname oddities and helps CakePHP resolve naming.</p> | ||
| + | <pre> | ||
| + | <?php | ||
| + | # $name controller attribute usage example | ||
| + | class RecipesController extends AppController { | ||
| + | var $name = 'Recipes'; | ||
| + | } | ||
| + | ?> | ||
| + | </pre> | ||
