To be fair to MVC, the article doesn't present a very good example. It doesn't really have an "M".

For trivial examples, dumping everything into one file will always look simpler.
________________________________________
From: web400-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx [web400-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx] on behalf of Nathan Andelin [nandelin@xxxxxxxxx]
Sent: Thursday, March 21, 2013 7:05 PM
To: Web Enabling the IBM i (AS/400 and iSeries)
Subject: Re: [WEB400] PHP coding styles; Procedural versus Model-view-controller (MVC)

I can see a lot of programmers reading that article and scratching their heads and wondering if "separation of concerns" or MVC is really worth it. The first sample shows DB I/O, control logic, and HTML in just one file. Strait forward and easy to read.

As the code evolves to finally using the "twig" template engine, the code is split into several files, and grows substantially in size. Some must wonder if maintainability is actually improved.

You're still left with a mixture of DB I/O, control logic, and Browser I/O in multiple files. The "separation of concerns" is not pure, so to speak.

CGIDEV had an HTML template interface back in 1998. PHP seems to be struggling with separation of concerns in 2013.

-Nathan

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