This package automatically decorates objects bound to views during the view render process.
- Automatically decorate objects bound to views
- Automatically decorate objects within paginator instances
- Automatically decorate objects within arrays and collections
If you're upgrading from Laravel Auto Presenter 4, to 5, note that:
- The
BasePresenter
no longer has a constructor, so you cannot callparent::__construct($resource)
. - The model is now injected using the
setWrappedObject
method, inherited from theBasePresenter
. - V5 now supports Laravel 5.4 as well as 5.1, 5.2, and 5.3.
Going from Laravel Auto Presenter 5, to 6, note that:
- We have a new
Decoratable
interface to determine if relations can be decorated. While this is not a BC break, sinceHasPresenter
extends it, it is defintely worth noting. - v6 supports Laravel 5.5 now, without dropping support for 5.1+.
- Our new minimum PHP version requirement is 7.0.0, up from 5.5.9.
Laravel Auto Presenter 6 requires PHP 7. This particular version supports Laravel 5.1, 5.2, 5.3, 5.4, or 5.5 only. If you need support for older PHP versions, please see Laravel Auto Presenter 5.
To get the latest version, simply require the project using Composer:
$ composer require mccool/laravel-auto-presenter
Once installed, you need to register the McCool\LaravelAutoPresenter\AutoPresenterServiceProvider
service provider in your config/app.php
, or if you're using Laravel 5.5, this can be done via the automatic package discovery.
You can also optionally alias our facade:
'AutoPresenter' => McCool\LaravelAutoPresenter\Facades\AutoPresenter::class,
To show how it's used, we'll pretend that we have an Eloquent Post model. It doesn't have to be Eloquent, it could be any kind of class. But, this is a normal situation. The Post model represents a blog post.
I'm using really basic code examples here, so just focus on how the auto-presenter is used and ignore the rest.
use Example\Accounts\User;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;
class Post extends Model
{
protected $table = 'posts';
protected $fillable = ['author_id', 'title', 'content', 'published_at'];
public function author()
{
return $this->belongsTo(User::class, 'author_id');
}
}
Also, we'll need a controller..
use Example\Accounts\Post;
use Illuminate\Routing\Controller;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\View;
class PostsController extends Controller
{
public function getIndex()
{
$posts = Post::all();
return View::make('posts.index', compact('posts'));
}
}
and a view...
@foreach($posts as $post)
<li>{{ $post->title }} - {{ $post->published_at }}</li>
@endforeach
In this example the published_at attribute is likely to be in the format: "Y-m-d H:i:s" or "2013-08-10 10:20:13". In the real world this is not what we want in our view. So, let's make a presenter that lets us change how the data from the Post class is rendered within the view.
use Carbon\Carbon;
use Example\Accounts\Post;
use McCool\LaravelAutoPresenter\BasePresenter;
class PostPresenter extends BasePresenter
{
public function published_at()
{
$published = $this->wrappedObject->published_at;
return Carbon::createFromFormat('Y-m-d H:i:s', $published)
->toFormattedDateString();
}
}
Note that the model is injected by calling the setWrappedObject
method, inherited from BasePresenter
.
We need the post class to implement the interface.
use Example\Accounts\User;
use Example\Blog\PostPresenter;
use McCool\LaravelAutoPresenter\HasPresenter;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;
class Post extends Model implements HasPresenter
{
protected $table = 'posts';
protected $fillable = ['author_id', 'title', 'content', 'published_at'];
public function author()
{
return $this->belongsTo(User::class, 'author_id');
}
public function getPresenterClass()
{
return PostPresenter::class;
}
}
Now, with no additional changes our view will show the date in the desired format.
The Decoratable
interface is used to allow the model's relations to be decorated, and the HasPresenter
interface (which extends that one) is used to have the model itself decorated.
If an object isn't being decorated correctly in the view then there's a good chance that it's simply not in existence when the view begins to render. For example, lazily-loaded relationships won't be decorated. You can fix this by eager-loading them instead. Auth::user() will never be decorated. I prefer to bind $currentUser to my views, anyway.
If you discover a security vulnerability within this package, please send an e-mail to Graham Campbell at [email protected]. All security vulnerabilities will be promptly addressed.
Laravel Auto Presenter is licensed under The MIT License (MIT).