One method of using templates in Laravel is via controller layouts. By specifying the layout
property on the controller, the view specified will be created for you and will be the assumed response that should be returned from actions.
class UserController extends BaseController {
/**
* The layout that should be used for responses.
*/
protected $layout = 'layouts.master';
/**
* Show the user profile.
*/
public function showProfile()
{
$this->layout->content = View::make('user.profile');
}
}
Blade is a simple, yet powerful templating engine provided with Laravel. Unlike controller layouts, Blade is driven by template inheritance and sections. All Blade templates should use the .blade.php
extension.
<!-- Stored in app/views/layouts/master.blade.php -->
<html>
<body>
@section('sidebar')
This is the master sidebar.
@show
<div class="container">
@yield('content')
</div>
</body>
</html>
@extends('layouts.master')
@section('sidebar')
@parent
<p>This is appended to the master sidebar.</p>
@stop
@section('content')
<p>This is my body content.</p>
@stop
Note that views which extend
a Blade layout simply override sections from the layout. Content of the layout can be included in a child view using the @parent
directive in a section, allowing you to append to the contents of a layout section such as a sidebar or footer.
Sometimes, such as when you are not sure if a section has been defined, you may wish to pass a default value to the @yield
directive. You may pass the default value as the second argument:
@yield('section', 'Default Content');
Hello, {{{ $name }}}.
The current UNIX timestamp is {{{ time() }}}.
Sometimes you may wish to echo a variable, but you aren't sure if the variable has been set. Basically, you want to do this:
{{{ isset($name) ? $name : 'Default' }}}
However, instead of writing a ternary statement, Blade allows you to use the following convenient short-cut:
{{{ $name or 'Default' }}}
If you need to display a string that is wrapped in curly braces, you may escape the Blade behavior by prefixing your text with an @
symbol:
@{{ This will not be processed by Blade }}
Of course, all user supplied data should be escaped or purified. To escape the output, you may use the triple curly brace syntax:
Hello, {{{ $name }}}.
If you don't want the data to be escaped, you may use double curly-braces:
Hello, {{ $name }}.
Note: Be very careful when echoing content that is supplied by users of your application. Always use the triple curly brace syntax to escape any HTML entities in the content.
@if (count($records) === 1)
I have one record!
@elseif (count($records) > 1)
I have multiple records!
@else
I don't have any records!
@endif
@unless (Auth::check())
You are not signed in.
@endunless
@for ($i = 0; $i < 10; $i++)
The current value is {{ $i }}
@endfor
@foreach ($users as $user)
<p>This is user {{ $user->id }}</p>
@endforeach
@while (true)
<p>I'm looping forever.</p>
@endwhile
@include('view.name')
You may also pass an array of data to the included view:
@include('view.name', array('some'=>'data'))
By default, sections are appended to any previous content that exists in the section. To overwrite a section entirely, you may use the overwrite
statement:
@extends('list.item.container')
@section('list.item.content')
<p>This is an item of type {{ $item->type }}</p>
@overwrite
@lang('language.line')
@choice('language.line', 1);
{{-- This comment will not be in the rendered HTML --}}
Blade even allows you to define your own custom control structures. When a Blade file is compiled, each custom extension is called with the view contents, allowing you to do anything from simple str_replace
manipulations to more complex regular expressions.
The Blade compiler comes with the helper methods createMatcher
and createPlainMatcher
, which generate the expression you need to build your own custom directives.
The createPlainMatcher
method is used for directives with no arguments like @endif
and @stop
, while createMatcher
is used for directives with arguments.
The following example creates a @datetime($var)
directive which simply calls ->format()
on $var
:
Blade::extend(function($view, $compiler)
{
$pattern = $compiler->createMatcher('datetime');
return preg_replace($pattern, '$1<?php echo $2->format('m/d/Y H:i'); ?>', $view);
});