Awesome Laravel tips and tricks for all artisans. PR and ideas are welcome!
An idea by PovilasKorop and MarceauKa.
Update 29 Jan 2021: Currently there are 125 tips divided into 14 sections.
- DB Models and Eloquent (31 tips)
- Models Relations (22 tips)
- Migrations (8 tips)
- Views (8 tips)
- Routing (13 tips)
- Validation (7 tips)
- Collections (4 tips)
- Auth (5 tips)
- Mail (4 tips)
- Artisan (5 tips)
- Factories (2 tips)
- Log and debug (2 tips)
- API (2 tips)
- Other (12 tips)
⬆️ Go to top ➡️ Next (Models Relations)
- Eloquent where date methods
- Increments and decrements
- No timestamp columns
- Set logged in user with Observers
- Soft-deletes: multiple restore
- Model all: columns
- To Fail or not to Fail
- Column name change
- Map query results
- Change Default Timestamp Fields
- Quick Order by created_at
- Automatic Column Value When Creating Records
- DB Raw Query Calculations Run Faster
- More than One Scope
- No Need to Convert Carbon
- Grouping by First Letter
- Never Update the Column
- Find Many
- Find by Key
- Use UUID instead of auto-increment
- Sub-selects in Laravel Way
- Hide Some Columns
- Exact DB Error
- Soft-Deletes with Query Builder
- Good Old SQL Query
- Use DB Transactions
- Update or Create
- Forget Cache on Save
- Change Format of Created_at and Updated_at
- Storing Array Type into JSON
- Make a Copy of the Model
In Eloquent, check the date with functions whereDay()
, whereMonth()
, whereYear()
, whereDate()
and whereTime()
.
$products = Product::whereDate('created_at', '2018-01-31')->get();
$products = Product::whereMonth('created_at', '12')->get();
$products = Product::whereDay('created_at', '31')->get();
$products = Product::whereYear('created_at', date('Y'))->get();
$products = Product::whereTime('created_at', '=', '14:13:58')->get();
If you want to increment some DB column in some table, just use increment()
function. Oh, and you can increment not only by 1, but also by some number, like 50.
Post::find($post_id)->increment('view_count');
User::find($user_id)->increment('points', 50);
If your DB table doesn't contain timestamp fields created_at
and updated_at
, you can specify that Eloquent model wouldn't use them, with $timestamps = false
property.
class Company extends Model
{
public $timestamps = false;
}
Use make:observer
and fill in creating()
method to automatically set up user_id
field for current logged in user.
class PostObserver
{
public function creating(Post $post)
{
$post->user_id = auth()->id();
}
}
When using soft-deletes, you can restore multiple rows in one sentence.
Post::withTrashed()->where('author_id', 1)->restore();
When calling Eloquent's Model::all()
, you can specify which columns to return.
$users = User::all(['id', 'name', 'email']);
In addition to findOrFail()
, there's also Eloquent method firstOrFail()
which will return 404 page if no records for query are found.
$user = User::where('email', '[email protected]')->firstOrFail();
In Eloquent Query Builder, you can specify "as" to return any column with a different name, just like in plain SQL query.
$users = DB::table('users')->select('name', 'email as user_email')->get();
After Eloquent query you can modify rows by using map()
function in Collections.
$users = User::where('role_id', 1)->get()->map(function (User $user) {
$user->some_column = some_function($user);
return $user;
});
What if you’re working with non-Laravel database and your timestamp columns are named differently? Maybe, you have create_time and update_time. Luckily, you can specify them in the model, too:
class Role extends Model
{
const CREATED_AT = 'create_time';
const UPDATED_AT = 'update_time';
}
Instead of:
User::orderBy('created_at', 'desc')->get();
You can do it quicker:
User::latest()->get();
By default, latest()
will order by created_at
.
There is an opposite method oldest()
which would order by created_at
ascending:
User::oldest()->get();
Also, you can specify another column to order by. For example, if you want to use updated_at
, you can do this:
$lastUpdatedUser = User::latest('updated_at')->first();
If you want to generate some DB column value when creating record, add it to model's boot()
method.
For example, if you have a field "position" and want to assign the next available position to the new record (like Country::max('position') + 1)
, do this:
class Country extends Model {
protected static function boot()
{
parent::boot();
Country::creating(function($model) {
$model->position = Country::max('position') + 1;
});
}
}
Use SQL raw queries like whereRaw()
method, to make some DB-specific calculations directly in query, and not in Laravel, usually the result will be faster. Like, if you want to get users that were active 30+ days after their registration, here's the code:
User::where('active', 1)
->whereRaw('TIMESTAMPDIFF(DAY, created_at, updated_at) > ?', 30)
->get();
You can combine and chain Query Scopes in Eloquent, using more than one scope in a query.
Model:
public function scopeActive($query) {
return $query->where('active', 1);
}
public function scopeRegisteredWithinDays($query, $days) {
return $query->where('created_at', '>=', now()->subDays($days));
}
Some Controller:
$users = User::registeredWithinDays(30)->active()->get();
If you're performing whereDate()
and check today's records, you can use Carbon's now()
and it will automatically be transformed to date. No need to do ->toDateString()
.
// Instead of
$todayUsers = User::whereDate('created_at', now()->toDateString())->get();
// No need to convert, just use now()
$todayUsers = User::whereDate('created_at', now())->get();
You can group Eloquent results by any custom condition, here's how to group by first letter of user's name:
$users = User::all()->groupBy(function($item) {
return $item->name[0];
});
If you have DB column which you want to be set only once and never updated again, you can set that restriction on Eloquent Model, with a mutator:
class User extends Model
{
public function setEmailAttribute($value)
{
if ($this->email) {
return;
}
$this->attributes['email'] = $value;
}
}
Eloquent method find()
may accept multiple parameters, and then it returns a Collection of all records found, not just one Model:
// Will return Eloquent Model
$user = User::find(1);
// Will return Eloquent Collection
$users = User::find([1,2,3]);
You can also find multiple records with whereKey()
method which takes care of which field is exactly your primary key (id
is the default but you may override it in Eloquent model):
$users = User::whereKey([1,2,3])->get();
You don't want to use auto incrementing ID in your model?
Migration:
Schema::create('users', function (Blueprint $table) {
// $table->increments('id');
$table->uuid('id')->unique();
});
Model:
class User extends Model
{
public $incrementing = false;
protected $keyType = 'string';
protected static function boot()
{
parent::boot();
User::creating(function ($model) {
$model->setId();
});
}
public function setId()
{
$this->attributes['id'] = Str::uuid();
}
}
From Laravel 6, you can use addSelect() in Eloquent statement, and do some calculation to that added column.
return Destination::addSelect(['last_flight' => Flight::select('name')
->whereColumn('destination_id', 'destinations.id')
->orderBy('arrived_at', 'desc')
->limit(1)
])->get();
When doing Eloquent query, if you want to hide specific field from being returned, one of the quickest ways is to add ->makeHidden()
on Collection result.
$users = User::all()->makeHidden(['email_verified_at', 'deleted_at']);
If you want to catch Eloquent Query exceptions, use specific QueryException
instead default Exception class, and you will be able to get the exact SQL code of the error.
try {
// Some Eloquent/SQL statement
} catch (\Illuminate\Database\QueryException $e) {
if ($e->getCode() === '23000') { // integrity constraint violation
return back()->withError('Invalid data');
}
}
Don't forget that soft-deletes will exclude entries when you use Eloquent, but won't work if you use Query Builder.
// Will exclude soft-deleted entries
$users = User::all();
// Will NOT exclude soft-deleted entries
$users = DB::table('users')->get();
If you need to execute a simple SQL query, without getting any results - like changing something in DB schema, you can just do DB::statement()
.
DB::statement('DROP TABLE users');
DB::statement('ALTER TABLE projects AUTO_INCREMENT=123');
If you have two DB operations performed, and second may get an error, then you should rollback the first one, right?
For that, I suggest to use DB Transactions, it's really easy in Laravel:
DB::transaction(function () {
DB::table('users')->update(['votes' => 1]);
DB::table('posts')->delete();
});
If you need to check if the record exists, and then update it, or create a new record otherwise, you can do it in one sentence - use Eloquent method updateOrCreate()
:
// Instead of this
$flight = Flight::where('departure', 'Oakland')
->where('destination', 'San Diego')
->first();
if ($flight) {
$flight->update(['price' => 99, 'discounted' => 1]);
} else {
$flight = Flight::create([
'departure' => 'Oakland',
'destination' => 'San Diego',
'price' => 99,
'discounted' => 1
]);
}
// Do it in ONE sentence
$flight = Flight::updateOrCreate(
['departure' => 'Oakland', 'destination' => 'San Diego'],
['price' => 99, 'discounted' => 1]
);
Tip given by @pratiksh404
If you have cache key like posts
that gives collection, and you want to forget that cache key on new store or update, you can call static saving
function on your model:
class Post extends Model
{
// Forget cache key on storing or updating
public static function boot()
{
parent::boot();
static::saving(function () {
Cache::forget('posts');
});
}
}
Tip given by @syofyanzuhad
To change the format of created_at
you can add a method in your model like this:
public function getCreatedAtFormattedAttribute()
{
return $this->created_at->format('H:i d, M Y');
}
So you can use it $entry->created_at_formatted
when it's needed.
It will return the created_at
attribute like this: 04:19 23, Aug 2020
.
And also for changing format of updated_at
attribute, you can add this method :
public function getUpdatedAtFormattedAttribute()
{
return $this->updated_at->format('H:i d, M Y');
}
So you can use it $entry->updated_at_formatted
when it's needed.
It will return the updated_at
attribute like this: 04:19 23, Aug 2020
.
Tip given by @pratiksh404
If you have input field which takes an array and you have to store it as a JSON, you can use $casts
property in your model. Here images
is a JSON attribute.
protected $casts = [
'images' => 'array',
];
So you can store it as a JSON, but when retrieved from DB, it can be used as an array.
If you have two very similar Models (like shipping address and billing address) and you need to make a copy of one to another, you can use replicate()
method and change some properties after that.
Example from the official docs:
$shipping = Address::create([
'type' => 'shipping',
'line_1' => '123 Example Street',
'city' => 'Victorville',
'state' => 'CA',
'postcode' => '90001',
]);
$billing = $shipping->replicate()->fill([
'type' => 'billing'
]);
$billing->save();
⬆️ Go to top ⬅️ Previous (DB Models and Eloquent) ➡️ Next (Migrations)
- OrderBy on Eloquent relationships
- Conditional relationships
- Raw DB Queries: havingRaw()
- Eloquent has() deeper
- Has Many. How many exactly?
- Default model
- Use hasMany to create Many
- Eager Loading with Exact Columns
- Touch parent updated_at easily
- Always Check if Relationship Exists
- Use withCount() to Calculate Child Relationships Records
- Extra Filter Query on Relationships
- Load Relationships Always, but Dynamically
- Instead of belongsTo, use hasMany
- Rename Pivot Table
- Update Parent in One Line
- Laravel 7+ Foreign Keys
- Combine Two "whereHas"
- Check if Relationship Method Exists
- Pivot Table with Extra Relations
- Load Count on-the-fly
- Randomize Relationship Order
You can specify orderBy() directly on your Eloquent relationships.
public function products()
{
return $this->hasMany(Product::class);
}
public function productsByName()
{
return $this->hasMany(Product::class)->orderBy('name');
}
If you notice that you use same relationship often with additional "where" condition, you can create a separate relationship method.
Model:
public function comments()
{
return $this->hasMany(Comment::class);
}
public function approved_comments()
{
return $this->hasMany(Comment::class)->where('approved', 1);
}
You can use RAW DB queries in various places, including havingRaw()
function after groupBy()
.
Product::groupBy('category_id')->havingRaw('COUNT(*) > 1')->get();
You can use Eloquent has()
function to query relationships even two layers deep!
// Author -> hasMany(Book::class);
// Book -> hasMany(Rating::class);
$authors = Author::has('books.ratings')->get();
In Eloquent hasMany()
relationships, you can filter out records that have X amount of children records.
// Author -> hasMany(Book::class)
$authors = Author::has('books', '>', 5)->get();
You can assign a default model in belongsTo
relationship, to avoid fatal errors when calling it like {{ $post->user->name }}
if $post->user doesn't exist.
public function user()
{
return $this->belongsTo('App\User')->withDefault();
}
If you have hasMany()
relationship, you can use saveMany()
to save multiple "child" entries from your "parent" object, all in one sentence.
$post = Post::find(1);
$post->comments()->saveMany([
new Comment(['message' => 'First comment']),
new Comment(['message' => 'Second comment']),
]);
You can do Laravel Eager Loading and specify the exact columns you want to get from the relationship.
$users = App\Book::with('author:id,name')->get();
You can do that even in deeper, second level relationships:
$users = App\Book::with('author.country:id,name')->get();
If you are updating a record and want to update the updated_at
column of parent relationship (like, you add new post comment and want posts.updated_at
to renew), just use $touches = ['post'];
property on child model.
class Comment extends Model
{
protected $touches = ['post'];
}
Never ever do $model->relationship->field
without checking if relationship object still exists.
It may be deleted for whatever reason, outside your code, by someone else's queued job etc.
Do if-else
, or {{ $model->relationship->field ?? '' }}
in Blade, or {{ optional($model->relationship)->field }}
.
If you have hasMany()
relationship, and you want to calculate “children” entries, don’t write a special query. For example, if you have posts and comments on your User model, write this withCount()
:
public function index()
{
$users = User::withCount(['posts', 'comments'])->get();
return view('users', compact('users'));
}
And then, in your Blade file, you will access those number with {relationship}_count
properties:
@foreach ($users as $user)
<tr>
<td>{{ $user->name }}</td>
<td class="text-center">{{ $user->posts_count }}</td>
<td class="text-center">{{ $user->comments_count }}</td>
</tr>
@endforeach
You may also order by that field:
User::withCount('comments')->orderBy('comments_count', 'desc')->get();
If you want to load relationship data, you can specify some limitations or ordering in a closure function. For example, if you want to get Countries with only three of their biggest cities, here's the code.
$countries = Country::with(['cities' => function($query) {
$query->orderBy('population', 'desc');
$query->take(3);
}])->get();
You can not only specify what relationships to ALWAYS load with the model, but you can do it dynamically, in the constructor method:
class ProductTag extends Model
{
protected $with = ['product'];
public function __construct() {
parent::__construct();
$this->with = ['product'];
if (auth()->check()) {
$this->with[] = 'user';
}
}
}
For belongsTo
relationship, instead of passing parent's ID when creating child record, use hasMany
relationship to make a shorter sentence.
// if Post -> belongsTo(User), and User -> hasMany(Post)...
// Then instead of passing user_id...
Post::create([
'user_id' => auth()->id(),
'title' => request()->input('title'),
'post_text' => request()->input('post_text'),
]);
// Do this
auth()->user()->posts()->create([
'title' => request()->input('title'),
'post_text' => request()->input('post_text'),
]);
If you want to rename "pivot" word and call your relationship something else, you just use ->as('name')
in your relationship.
Model:
public function podcasts() {
return $this->belongsToMany('App\Podcast')
->as('subscription')
->withTimestamps();
}
Controller:
$podcasts = $user->podcasts();
foreach ($podcasts as $podcast) {
// instead of $podcast->pivot->created_at ...
echo $podcast->subscription->created_at;
}
If you have a belongsTo()
relationship, you can update the Eloquent relationship data in the same sentence:
// if Project -> belongsTo(User::class)
$project->user->update(['email' => '[email protected]']);
From Laravel 7, in migrations you don't need to write two lines for relationship field - one for the field and one for foreign key. Use method foreignId()
.
// Before Laravel 7
Schema::table('posts', function (Blueprint $table)) {
$table->unsignedBigInteger('user_id');
$table->foreign('user_id')->references('id')->on('users');
}
// From Laravel 7
Schema::table('posts', function (Blueprint $table)) {
$table->foreignId('user_id')->constrained();
}
// Or, if your field is different from the table reference
Schema::table('posts', function (Blueprint $table)) {
$table->foreignId('created_by_id')->constrained('users', 'column');
}
In Eloquent, you can combine whereHas()
and orDoesntHave()
in one sentence.
User::whereHas('roles', function($query) {
$query->where('id', 1);
})
->orDoesntHave('roles')
->get();
If your Eloquent relationship names are dynamic and you need to check if relationship with such name exists on the object, use PHP function method_exists($object, $methodName)
$user = User::first();
if (method_exists($user, 'roles')) {
// Do something with $user->roles()->...
}
In many-to-many relationship, your pivot table may contain extra fields, and even extra relationships to other Model.
Then generate a separate Pivot Model:
php artisan make:model RoleUser --pivot
Next, specify it in belongsToMany()
with ->using()
method. Then you could do magic, like in the example.
// in app/Models/User.php
public function roles()
{
return $this->belongsToMany(Role::class)
->using(RoleUser::class)
->withPivot(['team_id']);
}
// app/Models/RoleUser.php: notice extends Pivot, not Model
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Relations\Pivot;
class RoleUser extends Pivot
{
public function team()
{
return $this->belongsTo(Team::class);
}
}
// Then, in Controller, you can do:
$firstTeam = auth()->user()->roles()->first()->pivot->team->name;
In addition to Eloquent's withCount()
method to count related records, you can also load the count on-the-fly, with loadCount()
:
// if your Book hasMany Reviews...
$book = App\Book::first();
$book->loadCount('reviews');
// Then you get access to $book->reviews_count;
// Or even with extra condition
$book->loadCount(['reviews' => function ($query) {
$query->where('rating', 5);
}]);
You can use inRandomOrder()
to randomize Eloquent query result, but also you can use it to randomize the relationship entries you're loading with query.
// If you have a quiz and want to randomize questions...
// 1. If you want to get questions in random order:
$questions = Question::inRandomOrder()->get();
// 2. If you want to also get question options in random order:
$questions = Question::with(['answers' => function($q) {
$q->inRandomOrder();
}])->inRandomOrder()->get();
⬆️ Go to top ⬅️ Previous (Models Relations) ➡️ Next (Views)
- Unsigned Integer
- Order of Migrations
- Migration fields with timezones
- Database migrations column types
- Default Timestamp
- Migration Status
- Create Migration with Spaces
- Create Column after Another Column
For foreign key migrations instead of integer()
use unsignedInteger()
type or integer()->unsigned()
, otherwise you may get SQL errors.
Schema::create('employees', function (Blueprint $table) {
$table->unsignedInteger('company_id');
$table->foreign('company_id')->references('id')->on('companies');
// ...
});
You can also use unsignedBigInteger()
if that other column is bigInteger()
type.
Schema::create('employees', function (Blueprint $table) {
$table->unsignedBigInteger('company_id');
});
If you want to change the order of DB migrations, just rename the file's timestamp, like from 2018_08_04_070443_create_posts_table.php
to2018_07_04_070443_create_posts_table.php
(changed from 2018_08_04
to 2018_07_04
).
They run in alphabetical order.
Did you know that in migrations there's not only timestamps()
but also timestampsTz()
, for the timezone?
Schema::create('employees', function (Blueprint $table) {
$table->increments('id');
$table->string('name');
$table->string('email');
$table->timestampsTz();
});
Also, there are columns dateTimeTz()
, timeTz()
, timestampTz()
, softDeletesTz()
.
There are interesting column types for migrations, here are a few examples.
$table->geometry('positions');
$table->ipAddress('visitor');
$table->macAddress('device');
$table->point('position');
$table->uuid('id');
See all column types on the official documentation.
While creating migrations, you can use timestamp()
column type with option
useCurrent()
, it will set CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
as default value.
$table->timestamp('created_at')->useCurrent();
$table->timestamp('updated_at')->useCurrent();
If you want to check what migrations are executed or not yet, no need to look at the database "migrations" table, you can launch php artisan migrate:status
command.
Example result:
+------+------------------------------------------------+-------+
| Ran? | Migration | Batch |
+------+------------------------------------------------+-------+
| Yes | 2014_10_12_000000_create_users_table | 1 |
| Yes | 2014_10_12_100000_create_password_resets_table | 1 |
| No | 2019_08_19_000000_create_failed_jobs_table | |
+------+------------------------------------------------+-------+
When typing make:migration
command, you don't necessarily have to use underscore _
symbol between parts, like create_transactions_table
. You can put the name into quotes and then use spaces instead of underscores.
// This works
php artisan make:migration create_transactions_table
// But this works too
php artisan make:migration "create transactions table"
Source: Steve O on Twitter
If you're adding a new column to the existing table, it doesn't necessarily has to become the last in the list. You can specify, after which column it should be created:
Schema::table('users', function (Blueprint $table) {
$table->string('phone')->after('email');
});
⬆️ Go to top ⬅️ Previous (Migrations) ➡️ Next (Routing)
- $loop variable in foreach
- Does view file exist?
- Error code Blade pages
- View without controllers
- Blade @auth
- Two-level $loop variable in Blade
- Create Your Own Blade Directive
- Blade Directives: IncludeIf, IncludeWhen, IncludeFirst
Inside of foreach loop, check if current entry is first/last by just using $loop
variable.
@foreach ($users as $user)
@if ($loop->first)
This is the first iteration.
@endif
@if ($loop->last)
This is the last iteration.
@endif
<p>This is user {{ $user->id }}</p>
@endforeach
There are also other properties like $loop->iteration
or $loop->count
.
Learn more on the official documentation.
You can check if View file exists before actually loading it.
if (view()->exists('custom.page')) {
// Load the view
}
You can even load an array of views and only the first existing will be actually loaded.
return view()->first(['custom.dashboard', 'dashboard'], $data);
If you want to create a specific error page for some HTTP code, like 500 - just create a blade file with this code as filename, in resources/views/errors/500.blade.php
, or 403.blade.php
etc, and it will automatically be loaded in case of that error code.
If you want route to just show a certain view, don't create a Controller method, just use Route::view()
function.
// Instead of this
Route::get('about', 'TextsController@about');
// And this
class TextsController extends Controller
{
public function about()
{
return view('texts.about');
}
}
// Do this
Route::view('about', 'texts.about');
Instead of if-statement to check logged in user, use @auth
directive.
Typical way:
@if(auth()->user())
// The user is authenticated.
@endif
Shorter:
@auth
// The user is authenticated.
@endauth
The opposite is @guest
directive:
@guest
// The user is not authenticated.
@endguest
In Blade's foreach you can use $loop variable even in two-level loop to reach parent variable.
@foreach ($users as $user)
@foreach ($user->posts as $post)
@if ($loop->parent->first)
This is first iteration of the parent loop.
@endif
@endforeach
@endforeach
It’s very easy - just add your own method in app/Providers/AppServiceProvider.php
. For example, if you want to have this for replace <br>
tags with new lines:
<textarea>@br2nl($post->post_text)</textarea>
Add this directive to AppServiceProvider’s boot()
method:
public function boot()
{
Blade::directive('br2nl', function ($string) {
return "<?php echo preg_replace('/\<br(\s*)?\/?\>/i', \"\n\", $string); ?>";
});
}
If you are not sure whether your Blade partial file actually would exist, you may use these condition commands:
This will load header only if Blade file exists
@includeIf('partials.header')
This will load header only for user with role_id 1
@includeWhen(auth()->user()->role_id == 1, 'partials.header')
This will try to load adminlte.header, if missing - will load default.header
@includeFirst('adminlte.header', 'default.header')
⬆️ Go to top ⬅️ Previous (Views) ➡️ Next (Validation)
- Route group within a group
- Wildcard subdomains
- What's behind the routes?
- Route Model Binding: You can define a key
- Quickly Navigate from Routes file to Controller
- Route Fallback: When no Other Route is Matched
- Route Parameters Validation with RegExp
- Rate Limiting: Global and for Guests/Users
- Query string parameters to Routes
- Separate Routes by Files
- Translate Resource Verbs
- Custom Resource Route Names
- More Readable Route List
In Routes, you can create a group within a group, assigning a certain middleware only to some URLs in the "parent" group.
Route::group(['prefix' => 'account', 'as' => 'account.'], function() {
Route::get('login', 'AccountController@login');
Route::get('register', 'AccountController@register');
Route::group(['middleware' => 'auth'], function() {
Route::get('edit', 'AccountController@edit');
});
});
You can create route group by dynamic subdomain name, and pass its value to every route.
Route::domain('{username}.workspace.com')->group(function () {
Route::get('user/{id}', function ($username, $id) {
//
});
});
Want to know what routes are actually behind Auth::routes()
?
From Laravel 7, it’s in a separate package, so check the file /vendor/laravel/ui/src/AuthRouteMethods.php
.
public function auth()
{
return function ($options = []) {
// Authentication Routes...
$this->get('login', 'Auth\LoginController@showLoginForm')->name('login');
$this->post('login', 'Auth\LoginController@login');
$this->post('logout', 'Auth\LoginController@logout')->name('logout');
// Registration Routes...
if ($options['register'] ?? true) {
$this->get('register', 'Auth\RegisterController@showRegistrationForm')->name('register');
$this->post('register', 'Auth\RegisterController@register');
}
// Password Reset Routes...
if ($options['reset'] ?? true) {
$this->resetPassword();
}
// Password Confirmation Routes...
if ($options['confirm'] ?? class_exists($this->prependGroupNamespace('Auth\ConfirmPasswordController'))) {
$this->confirmPassword();
}
// Email Verification Routes...
if ($options['verify'] ?? false) {
$this->emailVerification();
}
};
}
Before Laravel 7, check the file /vendor/laravel/framework/src/illuminate/Routing/Router.php
.
You can do Route model binding like Route::get('api/users/{user}', function (App\User $user) { … }
- but not only by ID field. If you want {user}
to be a username
field, put this in the model:
public function getRouteKeyName() {
return 'username';
}
This thing was optional before Laravel 8, and became a standart main syntax of routing in Laravel 8.
Instead of routing like this:
Route::get('page', 'PageController@action');
You can specify the Controller as a class:
Route::get('page', [\App\Http\Controllers\PageController::class, 'action']);
Then you will be able to click on PageController in PhpStorm, and navigate directly to Controller, instead of searching for it manually.
Or, to make it shorter, add this to top of Routes file:
use App\Http\Controllers\PageController;
// Then:
Route::get('page', [PageController::class, 'action']);
If you want to specify additional logic for not-found routes, instead of just throwing default 404 page, you may create a special Route for that, at the very end of your Routes file.
Route::group(['middleware' => ['auth'], 'prefix' => 'admin', 'as' => 'admin.'], function () {
Route::get('/home', 'HomeController@index');
Route::resource('tasks', 'Admin\TasksController');
});
// Some more routes....
Route::fallback(function() {
return 'Hm, why did you land here somehow?';
});
We can validate parameters directly in the route, with “where” parameter. A pretty typical case is to prefix your routes by language locale, like fr/blog
and en/article/333
. How do we ensure that those two first letters are not used for some other than language?
routes/web.php
:
Route::group([
'prefix' => '{locale}',
'where' => ['locale' => '[a-zA-Z]{2}']
], function () {
Route::get('/', 'HomeController@index');
Route::get('article/{id}', 'ArticleController@show');
});
You can limit some URL to be called a maximum of 60 times per minute, with throttle:60,1
:
Route::middleware('auth:api', 'throttle:60,1')->group(function () {
Route::get('/user', function () {
//
});
});
But also, you can do it separately for public and for logged-in users:
// maximum of 10 requests for guests, 60 for authenticated users
Route::middleware('throttle:10|60,1')->group(function () {
//
});
Also, you can have a DB field users.rate_limit and limit the amount for specific user:
Route::middleware('auth:api', 'throttle:rate_limit,1')->group(function () {
Route::get('/user', function () {
//
});
});
If you pass additional parameters to the route, in the array, those key / value pairs will automatically be added to the generated URL's query string.
Route::get('user/{id}/profile', function ($id) {
//
})->name('profile');
$url = route('profile', ['id' => 1, 'photos' => 'yes']); // Result: /user/1/profile?photos=yes
If you have a set of routes related to a certain "section", you may separate them in a special routes/XXXXX.php
file, and just include it in routes/web.php
Example with routes/auth.php
in Laravel Breeze by Taylor Otwell himself:
Route::get('/', function () {
return view('welcome');
});
Route::get('/dashboard', function () {
return view('dashboard');
})->middleware(['auth'])->name('dashboard');
require __DIR__.'/auth.php';
Then, in routes/auth.php
:
use App\Http\Controllers\Auth\AuthenticatedSessionController;
use App\Http\Controllers\Auth\RegisteredUserController;
// ... more controllers
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Route;
Route::get('/register', [RegisteredUserController::class, 'create'])
->middleware('guest')
->name('register');
Route::post('/register', [RegisteredUserController::class, 'store'])
->middleware('guest');
// ... A dozen more routes
But you should use this include()
only when that separate route file has the same settings for prefix/middlewares, otherwise it's better to group them in app/Providers/RouteServiceProvider
:
public function boot()
{
$this->configureRateLimiting();
$this->routes(function () {
Route::prefix('api')
->middleware('api')
->namespace($this->namespace)
->group(base_path('routes/api.php'));
Route::middleware('web')
->namespace($this->namespace)
->group(base_path('routes/web.php'));
// ... Your routes file listed next here
});
}
If you use resource controllers, but want to change URL verbs to non-English for SEO purposes, so instead of /create
you want Spanish /crear
, you can configure it by using Route::resourceVerbs()
method in App\Providers\RouteServiceProvider
:
public function boot()
{
Route::resourceVerbs([
'create' => 'crear',
'edit' => 'editar',
]);
// ...
}
When using Resource Controllers, in routes/web.php
you can specify ->names()
parameter, so the URL prefix in the browser and the route name prefix you use all over Laravel project may be different.
Route::resource('p', ProductController::class)->names('products');
So this code above will generate URLs like /p
, /p/{id}
, /p/{id}/edit
, etc.
But you would call them in the code by route('products.index')
, route('products.create')
, etc.
Have you ever run "php artisan route:list" and then realized that the list takes too much space and hard to read?
Here's the solution:
php artisan route:list --compact
Then it shows 3 columns instead of 6 columns: shows only Method / URI / Action.
+----------+---------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| Method | URI | Action |
+----------+---------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| GET|HEAD | / | Closure |
| GET|HEAD | api/user | Closure |
| POST | confirm-password | App\Http\Controllers\Auth\ConfirmablePasswordController@store |
| GET|HEAD | confirm-password | App\Http\Controllers\Auth\ConfirmablePasswordController@show |
| GET|HEAD | dashboard | Closure |
| POST | email/verification-notification | App\Http\Controllers\Auth\EmailVerificationNotificationController@store |
| POST | forgot-password | App\Http\Controllers\Auth\PasswordResetLinkController@store |
| GET|HEAD | forgot-password | App\Http\Controllers\Auth\PasswordResetLinkController@create |
| POST | login | App\Http\Controllers\Auth\AuthenticatedSessionController@store |
| GET|HEAD | login | App\Http\Controllers\Auth\AuthenticatedSessionController@create |
| POST | logout | App\Http\Controllers\Auth\AuthenticatedSessionController@destroy |
| POST | register | App\Http\Controllers\Auth\RegisteredUserController@store |
| GET|HEAD | register | App\Http\Controllers\Auth\RegisteredUserController@create |
| POST | reset-password | App\Http\Controllers\Auth\NewPasswordController@store |
| GET|HEAD | reset-password/{token} | App\Http\Controllers\Auth\NewPasswordController@create |
| GET|HEAD | verify-email | App\Http\Controllers\Auth\EmailVerificationPromptController@__invoke |
| GET|HEAD | verify-email/{id}/{hash} | App\Http\Controllers\Auth\VerifyEmailController@__invoke |
+----------+---------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
You can also specify the exact columns you want:
php artisan route:list --columns=Method,URI,Name
+----------+---------------------------------+---------------------+
| Method | URI | Name |
+----------+---------------------------------+---------------------+
| GET|HEAD | / | |
| GET|HEAD | api/user | |
| POST | confirm-password | |
| GET|HEAD | confirm-password | password.confirm |
| GET|HEAD | dashboard | dashboard |
| POST | email/verification-notification | verification.send |
| POST | forgot-password | password.email |
| GET|HEAD | forgot-password | password.request |
| POST | login | |
| GET|HEAD | login | login |
| POST | logout | logout |
| POST | register | |
| GET|HEAD | register | register |
| POST | reset-password | password.update |
| GET|HEAD | reset-password/{token} | password.reset |
| GET|HEAD | verify-email | verification.notice |
| GET|HEAD | verify-email/{id}/{hash} | verification.verify |
+----------+---------------------------------+---------------------+
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- Image validation
- Custom validation error messages
- Validate dates with "now" or "yesterday" words
- Validation Rule with Some Conditions
- Change Default Validation Messages
- Prepare for Validation
- Stop on First Validation Error
While validating uploaded images, you can specify the dimensions you require.
['photo' => 'dimensions:max_width=4096,max_height=4096']
You can customize validation error messages per field, rule and language - just create a specific language file resources/lang/xx/validation.php
with appropriate array structure.
'custom' => [
'email' => [
'required' => 'We need to know your e-mail address!',
],
],
You can validate dates by rules before/after and passing various strings as a parameter, like: tomorrow
, now
, yesterday
. Example: 'start_date' => 'after:now'
. It's using strtotime() under the hood.
$rules = [
'start_date' => 'after:tomorrow',
'end_date' => 'after:start_date'
];
If your validation rules depend on some condition, you can modify the rules by adding withValidator()
to your FormRequest
class, and specify your custom logic there. Like, if you want to add validation rule only for some user role.
use Illuminate\Validation\Validator;
class StoreBlogCategoryRequest extends FormRequest {
public function withValidator(Validator $validator) {
if (auth()->user()->is_admin) {
$validator->addRules(['some_secret_password' => 'required']);
}
}
}
If you want to change default validation error message for specific field and specific validation rule, just add a messages()
method into your FormRequest
class.
class StoreUserRequest extends FormRequest
{
public function rules()
{
return ['name' => 'required'];
}
public function messages()
{
return ['name.required' => 'User name should be real name'];
}
}
If you want to modify some field before default Laravel validation, or, in other words, "prepare" that field, guess what - there's a method prepareForValidation()
in FormRequest
class:
protected function prepareForValidation()
{
$this->merge([
'slug' => Illuminate\Support\Str::slug($this->slug),
]);
}
By default, Laravel validation errors will be returned in a list, checking all validation rules. But if you want the process to stop after the first error, use validation rule called bail
:
$request->validate([
'title' => 'bail|required|unique:posts|max:255',
'body' => 'required',
]);
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- Don’t Filter by NULL in Collections
- Use groupBy on Collections with Custom Callback Function
- Multiple Collection Methods in a Row
- Calculate Sum with Pagination
You can filter by NULL in Eloquent, but if you're filtering the collection further - filter by empty string, there's no "null" in that field anymore.
// This works
$messages = Message::where('read_at is null')->get();
// Won’t work - will return 0 messages
$messages = Message::all();
$unread_messages = $messages->where('read_at is null')->count();
// Will work
$unread_messages = $messages->where('read_at', '')->count();
If you want to group result by some condition whith isn’t a direct column in your database, you can do that by providing a closure function.
For example, if you want to group users by day of registration, here’s the code:
$users = User::all()->groupBy(function($item) {
return $item->created_at->format('Y-m-d');
});
Collection
class, so performed AFTER the results are fetched from the database.
If you query all results with ->all()
or ->get()
, you may then perform various Collection operations on the same result, it won’t query database every time.
$users = User::all();
echo 'Max ID: ' . $users->max('id');
echo 'Average age: ' . $users->avg('age');
echo 'Total budget: ' . $users->sum('budget');
How to calculate the sum of all records when you have only the PAGINATED collection? Do the calculation BEFORE the pagination, but from the same query.
// How to get sum of post_views with pagination?
$posts = Post::paginate(10);
// This will be only for page 1, not ALL posts
$sum = $posts->sum('post_views');
// Do this with Query Builder
$query = Post::query();
// Calculate sum
$sum = $query->sum('post_views');
// And then do the pagination from the same query
$posts = $query->paginate(10);
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- Check Multiple Permissions at Once
- More Events on User Registration
- Did you know about Auth::once()?
- Change API Token on users password update
- Override Permissions for Super Admin
In addition to @can
Blade directive, did you know you can check multiple permissions at once with @canany
directive?
@canany(['update', 'view', 'delete'], $post)
// The current user can update, view, or delete the post
@elsecanany(['create'], \App\Post::class)
// The current user can create a post
@endcanany
Want to perform some actions after new user registration? Head to app/Providers/EventServiceProvider.php
and add more Listeners classes, and then in those classes implement handle()
method with $event->user
object
class EventServiceProvider extends ServiceProvider
{
protected $listen = [
Registered::class => [
SendEmailVerificationNotification::class,
// You can add any Listener class here
// With handle() method inside of that class
],
];
You can login with user only for ONE REQUEST, using method Auth::once()
.
No sessions or cookies will be utilized, which means this method may be helpful when building a stateless API.
if (Auth::once($credentials)) {
//
}
It's convenient to change the user's API Token when its password changes.
Model:
public function setPasswordAttribute($value)
{
$this->attributes['password'] = $value;
$this->attributes['api_token'] = Str::random(100);
}
If you've defined your Gates but want to override all permissions for SUPER ADMIN user, to give that superadmin ALL permissions, you can intercept gates with Gate::before()
statement, in AuthServiceProvider.php
file.
// Intercept any Gate and check if it's super admin
Gate::before(function($user, $ability) {
if ($user->is_super_admin == 1) {
return true;
}
});
// Or if you use some permissions package...
Gate::before(function($user, $ability) {
if ($user->hasPermission('root')) {
return true;
}
});
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- Testing email into laravel.log
- Preview Mailables
- Default Email Subject in Laravel Notifications
- Send Notifications to Anyone
If you want to test email contents in your app but unable or unwilling to set up something like Mailgun, use .env
parameter MAIL_DRIVER=log
and all the email will be saved into storage/logs/laravel.log
file, instead of actually being sent.
If you use Mailables to send email, you can preview the result without sending, directly in your browser. Just return a Mailable as route result:
Route::get('/mailable', function () {
$invoice = App\Invoice::find(1);
return new App\Mail\InvoicePaid($invoice);
});
If you send Laravel Notification and don't specify subject in toMail(), default subject is your notification class name, CamelCased into Spaces.
So, if you have:
class UserRegistrationEmail extends Notification {
//
}
Then you will receive an email with subject User Registration Email.
You can send Laravel Notifications not only to a certain user with $user->notify()
, but also to anyone you want, via Notification::route()
, with so-called "on-demand" notifications:
Notification::route('mail', '[email protected]')
->route('nexmo', '5555555555')
->route('slack', 'https://hooks.slack.com/services/...')
->notify(new InvoicePaid($invoice));
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- Artisan command parameters
- Maintenance Mode
- Artisan command help
- Exact Laravel version
- Launch Artisan command from anywhere
When creating Artisan command, you can ask the input in variety of ways: $this->confirm()
, $this->anticipate()
, $this->choice()
.
// Yes or no?
if ($this->confirm('Do you wish to continue?')) {
//
}
// Open question with auto-complete options
$name = $this->anticipate('What is your name?', ['Taylor', 'Dayle']);
// One of the listed options with default index
$name = $this->choice('What is your name?', ['Taylor', 'Dayle'], $defaultIndex);
If you want to enable maintenance mode on your page, execute the down Artisan command:
php artisan down
Then people would see default 503 status page.
You may also provide flags, in Laravel 8:
- the path the user should be redirected to
- the view that should be prerendered
- secret phrase to bypass maintenance mode
- status code during maintenance mode
- retry page reload every X seconds
php artisan down --redirect="/" --render="errors::503" --secret="1630542a-246b-4b66-afa1-dd72a4c43515" --status=200 --retry=60
Before Laravel 8:
- message that would be shown
- retry page reload every X seconds
- still allow the access to some IP address
php artisan down --message="Upgrading Database" --retry=60 --allow=127.0.0.1
When you've done the maintenance work, just run:
php artisan up
To check the options of artisan command, Run artisan commands with --help
flag. For example, php artisan make:model --help
and see how many options you have:
Options:
-a, --all Generate a migration, seeder, factory, and resource controller for the model
-c, --controller Create a new controller for the model
-f, --factory Create a new factory for the model
--force Create the class even if the model already exists
-m, --migration Create a new migration file for the model
-s, --seed Create a new seeder file for the model
-p, --pivot Indicates if the generated model should be a custom intermediate table model
-r, --resource Indicates if the generated controller should be a resource controller
--api Indicates if the generated controller should be an API controller
-h, --help Display this help message
-q, --quiet Do not output any message
-V, --version Display this application version
--ansi Force ANSI output
--no-ansi Disable ANSI output
-n, --no-interaction Do not ask any interactive question
--env[=ENV] The environment the command should run under
-v|vv|vvv, --verbose Increase the verbosity of messages: 1 for normal output, 2 for more verbose output and 3 for debug
Find out exactly what Laravel version you have in your app, by running command
php artisan --version
If you have an Artisan command, you can launch it not only from Terminal, but also from anywhere in your code, with parameters. Use Artisan::call() method:
Route::get('/foo', function () {
$exitCode = Artisan::call('email:send', [
'user' => 1, '--queue' => 'default'
]);
//
});
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While using factories for seeding data, you can provide Factory Callback functions to perform some action after record is inserted.
$factory->afterCreating(App\User::class, function ($user, $faker) {
$user->accounts()->save(factory(App\Account::class)->make());
});
Did you know that Faker can generate not only text values but also IMAGES? See avatar
field here - it will generate 50x50 image:
$factory->define(User::class, function (Faker $faker) {
return [
'name' => $faker->name,
'email' => $faker->unique()->safeEmail,
'email_verified_at' => now(),
'password' => bcrypt('password'),
'remember_token' => Str::random(10),
'avatar' => $faker->image(storage_path('images'), 50, 50)
];
});
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You can write Log::info()
, or shorter info()
message with additional parameters, for more context about what happened.
Log::info('User failed to login.', ['id' => $user->id]);
Instead of doing dd($result)
you can put ->dd()
as a method directly at the end of your Eloquent sentence, or any Collection.
// Instead of
$users = User::where('name', 'Taylor')->get();
dd($users);
// Do this
$users = User::where('name', 'Taylor')->get()->dd();
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If you use Eloquent API Resources to return data, they will be automatically wrapped in 'data'. If you want to remove it, add JsonResource::withoutWrapping();
in app/Providers/AppServiceProvider.php
.
class AppServiceProvider extends ServiceProvider
{
public function boot()
{
JsonResource::withoutWrapping();
}
}
If you have API endpoint which performs some operations but has no response, so you wanna return just "everything went ok", you may return 204 status code "No
content". In Laravel, it's easy: return response()->noContent();
.
public function reorder(Request $request)
{
foreach ($request->input('rows', []) as $row) {
Country::find($row['id'])->update(['position' => $row['position']]);
}
return response()->noContent();
}
⬆️ Go to top ⬅️ Previous (API)
- Localhost in .env
- When (NOT) to run "composer update"
- Composer: check for newer versions
- Auto-Capitalize Translations
- Carbon with Only Hours
- Single Action Controllers
- Redirect to Specific Controller Method
- Use Older Laravel Version
- Add Parameters to Pagination Links
- Repeatable Callback Functions
- Request: has any
- Simple Pagination
Don't forget to change APP_URL
in your .env
file from http://localhost
to the real URL, cause it will be the basis for any links in your email notifications and elsewhere.
APP_NAME=Laravel
APP_ENV=local
APP_KEY=base64:9PHz3TL5C4YrdV6Gg/Xkkmx9btaE93j7rQTUZWm2MqU=
APP_DEBUG=true
APP_URL=http://localhost
Not so much about Laravel, but... Never run composer update
on production live server, it's slow and will "break" repository. Always run composer update
locally on your computer, commit new composer.lock
to the repository, and run composer install
on the live server.
If you want to find out which of your composer.json
packages have released newer versions, just run composer outdated
. You will get a full list with all information, like this below.
phpdocumentor/type-resolver 0.4.0 0.7.1
phpunit/php-code-coverage 6.1.4 7.0.3 Library that provides collection, processing, and rende...
phpunit/phpunit 7.5.9 8.1.3 The PHP Unit Testing framework.
ralouphie/getallheaders 2.0.5 3.0.3 A polyfill for getallheaders.
sebastian/global-state 2.0.0 3.0.0 Snapshotting of global state
In translation files (resources/lang
), you can specify variables not only as :variable
, but also capitalized as :VARIABLE
or :Variable
- and then whatever value you pass - will be also capitalized automatically.
// resources/lang/en/messages.php
'welcome' => 'Welcome, :Name'
// Result: "Welcome, Taylor"
echo __('messages.welcome', ['name' => 'taylor']);
If you want to have a current date without seconds and/or minutes, use Carbon's methods like setSeconds(0)
or setMinutes(0)
.
// 2020-04-20 08:12:34
echo now();
// 2020-04-20 08:12:00
echo now()->setSeconds(0);
// 2020-04-20 08:00:00
echo now()->setSeconds(0)->setMinutes(0);
// Another way - even shorter
echo now()->startOfHour();
If you want to create a controller with just one action, you can use __invoke()
method and even create "invokable" controller.
Route:
Route::get('user/{id}', 'ShowProfile');
Artisan:
php artisan make:controller ShowProfile --invokable
Controller:
class ShowProfile extends Controller
{
public function __invoke($id)
{
return view('user.profile', [
'user' => User::findOrFail($id)
]);
}
}
You can redirect()
not only to URL or specific route, but to a specific Controller's specific method, and even pass the parameters. Use this:
return redirect()->action('SomeController@method', ['param' => $value]);
If you want to use OLDER version instead of the newest Laravel, use this command:
composer create-project --prefer-dist laravel/laravel project "7.*"
Change 7.* to whichever version you want.
In default Pagination links, you can pass additional parameters, preserve the original query string, or even point to a specific #xxxxx
anchor.
{{ $users->appends(['sort' => 'votes'])->links() }}
{{ $users->withQueryString()->links() }}
{{ $users->fragment('foo')->links() }}
If you have a callback function that you need to re-use multiple times, you can assign it to a variable, and then re-use.
$userCondition = function ($query) {
$query->where('user_id', auth()->id());
};
// Get articles that have comments from this user
// And return only those comments from this user
$articles = Article::with(['comments' => $userCondition])
->whereHas('comments', $userCondition)
->get();
You can check not only one parameter with $request->has()
method, but also check for multiple parameters present, with $request->hasAny()
:
public function store(Request $request)
{
if ($request->hasAny(['api_key', 'token'])) {
echo 'We have API key passed';
} else {
echo 'No authorization parameter';
}
}
In pagination, if you want to have just "Previous/next" links instead of all the page numbers (and have fewer DB queries because of that), just change paginate()
to simplePaginate()
:
// Instead of
$users = User::paginate(10);
// You can do this
$users = User::simplePaginate(10);