New in Symfony 7.1: MacAddress and Charset Constraints (Symfony Blog) (symfony.com)
Symfony 7.1 adds two new constraints to validate MAC addresses and the charset in which contents are encoded
Symfony 7.1 adds two new constraints to validate MAC addresses and the charset in which contents are encoded
Symfony 7.1 introduces a new MapUploadedFile attribute to inject uploaded files into controller arguments.
Explore insights from PHP experts who gathered from all around the world to discuss web development innovations, embracing change, and securely maintaining our code.
Blackfire’s continuous profiler dashboard opens new performance improvement possibilities. Let’s learn how to navigate through flame graphs, and table views to pinpoint performance bottlenecks and optimize your code.
Explore April's Sylius updates with new releases, partner projects, upcoming events, and community contributions. Join us as we gear up for Sylius 2.0
For many developers, PHP is synonymous with web development. But what if you could leverage your...
Pest is a testing framework for PHP you can install via composer that makes writing your tests a lot easier than you think!
Here could be extensive AI-generated introduction about Database referential integrity, but not...
Disclaimer This is a tutorial or a training course. Please don't expect a walk-through...
A quick guide on how to set up OPCache and fine-tune PHP-FPM.
Symfony 7.1 adds a new TypeInfo component that extracts PHP type information from multiple elements (class properties and methods, return types of functions and methods, etc.) using several sources of...
Discover Gally, an advanced searchandising engine built on top of Symfony, API Platform, and Elasticsearch. Learn how to set up and configure Gally alongside the Gally bundle for Sylius in this presentation at SymfonyLive Berlin 2024.
Explore Serializer's evolution in Symfony with Baptiste Leduc. Discover recent enhancements and delve into advanced techniques for maximizing both flexibility and performance in serialization.
When I come to a new project, I want to make a rough idea of what I'm dealing with in a few minutes. I usually check composer.json and measure the lines. Then, I'd love to run PHPStan and get a rough idea of the current state. But are there baselines, custom extensions, global ignores, or no PHPStan at all?
Introduction Some months ago I started a side project aiming for study and personal use to...
This week, Symfony 5.4.39, 6.4.7 and 7.0.7 maintenance versions were released. In addition, Symfony published the first beta of Symfony 7.1 so you can test it in your own applications before the final...
Attributes First class callable syntax Constructor changes Parameter changes This post is going to...
Our first-ever episode of the Change mode podcast is kicking things off nicely with a wonderful guest...
Here is a small library to validate and transform api data. It can read Symfony atrtributes and you...
Unveil Symfony UX benefits and practical implementation with Matheo Daninos. Dive into fundamental principles, explore architecture with Stimulus and Turbo, and witness their team-boosting potential.
After the first blog post of this series explained the basic concepts of the settings-bundle, this...
...and how to avoid it. Type coverage is a way to gradually add type declarations to your PHP project—step by step, one by one. It's a PHPStan package that helps you maintain a specific minimal level from 0 % to 100 %. Once we reach high coverage of 80-90 %, we feel safer. But our code can actually be in worse, even dangerous,...