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Phalcon was created by Andrés Gutiérrez and collaborators looking for a new approach to traditional web application frameworks written in PHP. The original draft of the framework in 2011 was called "Spark", [6] the name was later changed to Phalcon, representing the words "PHP" and "falcon". Phalcon's initial release was made available on ...
PHP >= 7.3 [88] Toolkit-independent Yes Push-pull Yes Table and row data gateway or Doctrine Unit tests, PHP Unit or other independent Yes ACL-based Yes APC, Database, File, Memcache, Zend Platform: Yes Yes ? ? Laravel: PHP >= 8.0 [89] Any Yes Push Yes Eloquent: PHPUnit: Yes Yes Yes APC, Database, File, Memcache, Redis: Yes Yes Yes Yes Li3 ...
The focus was for Pop PHP to become a more modern, MVC-style web framework with a set of supporting components to assist in building web applications. After PHP 5.4 was released, Pop PHP 2 was refactored to take advantage of the new features available in PHP 5.4, as well as fully leveraging Composer by breaking out almost all of the components ...
Laminas Project (formerly Zend Framework or ZF) is an open source, object-oriented web application framework implemented in PHP 7 and licensed under the New BSD License. [3] The framework is basically a collection of professional PHP [4]-based packages. [5]
CakePHP Bake is a tool for automatically generating application, skeletons and boilerplate code. It uses a pre-existing database schema to infer the correct data relations and data types and using that to generate a full set of controllers, model object and view templates. It can generate a basic CRUD application with zero coding. [14]
pH7Builder is written in PHP 7.4, [2] is object-oriented and uses the MVC pattern (Model-View-Controller). The software is based on the homemade pH7Framework and is designed with the KISS principle in mind. For better flexibility, the software uses PDO (PHP Data Objects) abstraction
Laravel is a free and open-source PHP-based web framework for building web applications. [3] It was created by Taylor Otwell and intended for the development of web applications following the model–view–controller (MVC) architectural pattern and based on Symfony.
Pluggability is a core feature of the framework, as is object-oriented programming, so the application and core is mainly extended via plugin classes using a public method naming convention to denote event hooks, 'magic event' hooks, 'magic methods', and occasionally method overrides. Some general functions in the core can be overridden by ...