<?php
namespace AppBundle\Form\DataTransformer;
use Doctrine\Common\Persistence\ObjectManager;
use Symfony\Component\Form\DataTransformerInterface;
use Symfony\Component\Form\Exception\TransformationFailedException;
class ProduitToAssistanceTransformer implements DataTransformerInterface
{
/**
* ProduitToAssistanceTransformer constructor.
*/
public function __construct()
{
}
/**
* Transforms a value from the original representation to a transformed representation.
*
* This method is called on two occasions inside a form field:
*
* 1. When the form field is initialized with the data attached from the datasource (object or array).
* 2. When data from a request is submitted using {@link Form::submit()} to transform the new input data
* back into the renderable format. For example if you have a date field and submit '2009-10-10'
* you might accept this value because its easily parsed, but the transformer still writes back
* "2009/10/10" onto the form field (for further displaying or other purposes).
*
* This method must be able to deal with empty values. Usually this will
* be NULL, but depending on your implementation other empty values are
* possible as well (such as empty strings). The reasoning behind this is
* that value transformers must be chainable. If the transform() method
* of the first value transformer outputs NULL, the second value transformer
* must be able to process that value.
*
* By convention, transform() should return an empty string if NULL is
* passed.
*
* @param mixed $value The value in the original representation
*
* @return mixed The value in the transformed representation
*
* @throws TransformationFailedException When the transformation fails.
*/
public function transform($product)
{
if (null === $product) {
return "";
}
return $product;
}
/**
* Transforms a value from the transformed representation to its original
* representation.
*
* This method is called when {@link Form::submit()} is called to transform the requests tainted data
* into an acceptable format for your data processing/model layer.
*
* This method must be able to deal with empty values. Usually this will
* be an empty string, but depending on your implementation other empty
* values are possible as well (such as empty strings). The reasoning behind
* this is that value transformers must be chainable. If the
* reverseTransform() method of the first value transformer outputs an
* empty string, the second value transformer must be able to process that
* value.
*
* By convention, reverseTransform() should return NULL if an empty string
* is passed.
*
* @param mixed $value The value in the transformed representation
*
* @return mixed The value in the original representation
*
* @throws TransformationFailedException When the transformation fails.
*/
public function reverseTransform($id)
{
if (!$id) {
return null;
}
return $id;
}
}