I am building a web app and running Laravel teams, I have made a user table but am unsure how to nest the data so that the users are viewing their main team. From my research I have found:
return App\Models\Calendar::where(
'team_id', $request->user()->currentTeam->id
)->get();
or
// Access a user's "personal" team...
$user->personalTeam() : Laravel\Jetstream\Team
but I need a little help applying it properly as I've never done it.
My current view, Controller, and route are:
View is just a standard table which I built to show with a foreach method:
<div class="">
{{$user->name}}
</div>
Controller:
public function render()
{
# Load all users and sort by name
return view('users.table',[
'users' => User::orderBy('name')->paginate($this->perPage)
]);
}
Route:
Route::middleware(['auth:sanctum', 'verified'])->group( function () {
Route::resource('users', \App\Http\Livewire\Users::class);
});
I tried to cut down the code so it's easier to give me suggestions, let me know if I missed anything.
This is my current screenshot of the users table:
File tree
Change
User::orderBy('name')->paginate($this->perPage)
with
Team::find(Auth::user()->current_team_id)->users()->paginate($this->perPage)
Related
I'm basically using VueRouter to create all my routes which is working really well. However, my application is built using Laravel. So if I refresh any of the routes I get an error that the route is not defined. So at the minute in every controller I've had to add an index function. This just returns the view of my app.blade which is just the usual tags etc and the to load my single page app. I'm just wondering if there is a cleaner solution? I guess I could move the return view into a single Controller and make my Controllers extend this. But I'm just wondering if there is a better way I'm missing?
i.e. one of my routes via VueRouter:
{
path: "/clients",
name: "clients",
component: () => import(/* webpackChunkName: "clients" */ "../resources/js/components/Views/Clients/Clients.vue")
},
The route in my clients.php file
Route::get('/clients', [App\Http\Controllers\ClientController::class, 'index'])->name('clients');
Then the ClientController index function
public function index()
{
return view('app');
}
It would just be nice to have the loading of the app.blade done somewhere else and not need to be specified per controller. Any help would be appreciated to ensure it's all done efficiently!
Thanks!
Here is how I solved this issue for one of my projects which is also single page application in Vue and Laravel: https://github.com/lyyka/laravel-vue-blog-spa/blob/master/routes/web.php
Simply, in your routes file, you put this code:
Route::get('/{any}', function () {
return view('welcome');
})->where("any", ".*");
And in my welcome view I have:
#extends('layouts.app')
#section('content')
<div class = "container">
<router-view></router-view>
</div>
#endsection
Basically this will return your app view for any URL and so your Vue SPA should work properly. Generally, it is not a good practice to put callback functions inside your routes file, but in this case, you won't even be using your routes file as it is a SPA, so this solution can pass! :)
You should use your single html file and make a controller.
On your controller
public function index(){
return view('index');
}
on your web.php
basically, you should make the same route on your laravel and vue
Route::get('/products', [ProductsController::class,'index']);
in my vue-routes
import Products from './components/Products.vue'
{
path:'/products'
component: Products
}
My table has the option edit. A row can be updated and saved to the database. While I was trying to implement this option I came across uncertainty. What do I have to do with the data from my edited row when it arrives at my controller? It doesn't seem clear to me do I have to use the edit, the update or combine them both? Do I need edit to find the id of the row that needs to be updated?
I am using the following code in methods to send data to my controller
<template slot="actions" slot-scope="row">
<span #click="updateProduct(row.item);" class="fas fa-pencil-alt green addPointer"></span>
</template>
updateProduct: async function(productData) {
axios.post('/product/update', {
productData: productData
.catch(function(error){
console.log(error)
})
})
}
In my controller, I think I have to find the id. I am pretty sure I am confusing different methods together. Thanks for any input.
public function edit()
{
$product = Product::with('id')->find($id);
// do something with it
}
public function update(Request, $request){
$product->update([
'name' => $request->productData->Name,
'description' => $request->productData->Descr
]);
}
the difference is significant. Edit is for displaying a form to apply changes and Update is used to set them up to server.
Edit is via GET http Update is via PUT http
In Laravel resource controller you can see these two functions "edit" & "update"
For example, you have a resource route 'post'
Edit:
you can return your edit form with your previously stored data
you can call using GET method & URL will be "/post/{id}/edit" and the route will be "post.edit"
update:
you can submit your data which you want to update
you can call using PUT/PATCH method & URL will be "/post/{id}" and the route will be "post.update"
For more information refer : laravel.com -> controllers
On my laravel home page I have a vue component like this
<new-tutor area-id="{{ $area->slug }}" tutor-id="{{ $tutor->slug }}" route="{{ route('tutor.show', [$area, $tutor]) }}"></new-tutor>
it returns all new tutors in a given area in individual bootstrap cards, and uses this controller
public function index(Request $request, Area $area, Profile $profile, Tutor $tutor)
{
$newTutors = Tutor::with(['user', 'area'])->inArea($area)->latestfirst()->get();
return response()->json($newTutor, 200);
}
I would like to be able to click on the tutors name and be sent to that tutors page, but I can't seem to get the tutor slug to pass though properly, and I am not sure why.
In my vue component I set the link like
<a :href="route">{{newTutor.name}}</a>
and I have props set up like this
props: {
areaId: null,
tutorId: null,
route: { type: String, required: true }
},
the slug does come through in a dd on newTutors, and Tutor.
Also note, I am using the same web route
tutor.show
in other blade templates, so I am mostly confident that that is not where the issue is.
if you using laravel + vuejs,You need add #{{}}
<a :href="route">#{{newTutor.name}}</a>
I'm using this package here in Laravel 5.6 to add likes system in my project.
I have updated the models as per their documentation. However, I'm confused on how to use this package.
I have added tried the following which adds the logged in user to the particular article likes list when he visits the link.
public function show(ArticleCategory $articlecategory, $slug)
{
$categories = ArticleCategory::all();
$article = Article::where('slug', $slug)->first();
$user = User::first();
$user->addFavorite($article);
return view('articles.show', compact('article', 'categories'));
}
And in my user dashboard, I'm able to pull up all the articles which are liked by the user with
$user = Auth::user();
$favoritearticles = $user->favorite(Article::class);
But I'm looking for a functionality where I have a button on the article page where when a logged user clicks on it, he is added to the likes list. I haven't tried this before so stuck at this point.
I replaced
$user->addFavorite($article);
with
$user->toggleFavorite($article);
but that just toggles the favourite list. I mean when I visit the link once, the logged in user is added to the likes list. When I visit the link for the second time, the logged in user is removed from the likes list. The cycle is repeated.
Could anyone explain to me how to achieve the like functionality with a button?
you're almost there,
You have to add a button and on click you will trigger an AJAX request to the server to perform what you want without refreshing the page, here is an example:
First you'll add a button and give it an ID or class:
<button class="like">Like</button>
Then the moment you click on it, you'll call the url which you need to replace with the route to your function,
Then you have to declare a method like so:
public function like($slug)
{
$article = Article::where('slug', $slug)->first();
$user = \Auth::user(); //to get authenticated user...
$user->toggleFavorite($article); // toggle so if u already like it u remove it from the liked table
return response()->json(['status': 1])
}
And of course add the route to your routes.php:
Router::get('like/{slug}',"ArticleController#like");
then add the function (jQuery is used here) to hook the AJAX call
$('.like').on('click', function(){
$.ajax({
type: "GET",
url: 'wwww.example.com/articles/slug',
data: {slug: 'the slug'},
success: function(data){
alert('its done')
},
});
})
Create a form in you article page with a button
<form action="{{url('favorite/{$post->id}')}}" method="post">
#if($post->isFavorited())
<button type="submit">Remove from favorite</button>
#else
<button type="submit">Add to favorite</button>
#endif
</form>
create the favorite route and controller
Router::post('favorite/{id}',"ArticleController#toggleFavorite");
public function toggleFavorite($id) {
$article = ArticleCategory::find($id);//get the article based on the id
Auth::user()->toggleFavorite($article);//add/remove the user from the favorite list
return Redirect::to('article/{$id}');//redirect back (optionally with a message)
}
Hi I am very new to Laravel and MVC frameworks in general and am looking to create a list of links (in a view within a template) that links to some content. I am using this to display a list of nine people and to display their profile description when the link is clicked on. I have created a model of what the page looks like at http://i.imgur.com/8XhI2Ba.png. The portion that I am concerned with is in blue. Is there a way to route these links to something like /about/link2 or /about?link2 while maintaining the same exact page structure but modifying the ‘link content’ section (on the right of the link menu) to show the specific link's content? I would greatly appreciate it if someone could point me in the right direction, as I have literally no clue where to go with this!
There are a couple ways you can go about doing this.
Templates
Create your route.
Im assuming a lot about your app here but hopefully you get the picture. If you need help with anything in particular, be sure to update your question with the code youve tried so it will be easier to help you.
Route::get('about/{page}', function($page)
{
$profile = Profile::where('name', $page)->first();
return View::make('about')->with('profile', $profile);
});
Modify Template.blade.php
Put this line where you wish for About.blade.php to appear.
#yield('content')
Create your view which will extend your template
#extends('Template')
#section('content')
<h2>User Profile</h2>
<ul>
<li>Name: {{ $profile->name }}</li>
<li>Last Updated: {{ $profile->updated_at }}</li>
</ul>
#stop
AJAX
This solution will utilize AJAX to grab the data from the server and output it on the page.
Route for initial page view
Route::get('about', function($page)
{
$profiles = Profile::all();
return View::make('about')->with('profiles', $profiles);
});
Feel free to follow the same templating structure as before but this time we need to add some javascript into the template to handle the AJAX. Will also need to id everything which needs to be dynamically set so we can easily set it with jquery.
#extends('Template')
#section('content')
<h2>Links</h2>
#foreach($profiles as $profile)
{{ $profile->name }}
#endforeach
<h2>User Profile</h2>
<ul>
<li>Name: <span id="profile_name">{{ $profile->name }}</span></li>
<li>Last Updated: <span id="profile_updated_at">{{ $profile->updated_at }}</span></li>
</ul>
<script>
function setProfile(a)
{
$.ajax({
method: 'get',
url: 'getProfile',
dataType: 'json',
data: {
profile: $(a).data('id')
},
success: function(profile) {
$('#profile_name').html(profile.name);
$('#profile_updated_at').html(profile.updated_at);
},
error: function() {
alert('Error loading data.');
}
});
}
</script>
#stop
Route to handle the AJAX request
Route::get('getProfile', function()
{
$profile_id = Input::get('profile');
$profile = Profile::find($profile_id);
return $profile->toJson();
});
Now, the page should not have to reload and only the profile information should be updated.
Making some assumptions here as no code posted and assuming you're using the latest version of Laravel, Laravel 5.
Lets say you have a table in your database named users and you have a Model named Users (Laravel 5 comes with the Users model as default, see app/Users.php). The users will be the base of our data for the links.
Firstly, you want to register a route so you can access the page to view some information. You can do this in the routes file. The routes file can be found here: app/Http/routes.php.
To register a route add the following code:
Route::get('users', ['uses' => 'UserController#index']);
Now what this route does is whenever we hit the URL http://your-app-name/public/users (URL might be different depending on how you have your app set up, i.e. you may not have to include public) in our web browser it will respond by running the index method on the UserController.
To respond to that route you can set up your UserController as so:
<?php namespace App\Http\Controllers;
class UserController extends Controller {
public function index()
{
}
}
Controllers should be stored in app/Http/Controllers/.
Now lets flesh out the index method:
public function index()
{
// grab our users
$users = App\Users::all();
// return a view with the users data
return view('users.index')->with('users');
}
This grabs the users from the database and loads up a view passing the users data.
Here's what your view could look like:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>Users Page</title>
</head>
<body>
#foreach($users as $user)
<a href="{{ URL::route('user', ['id' => $user->id]) }}">
{{ $user->username }}
</a>
#endforeach
</body>
</html>
The view code will loop through each user from the $users data we passed to the view and create a link to their user page which is different for each user based on their id (their unique identifier in the DB)
Due to the way I've named it, this would be found in app/views/users/index.blade.php - if you save files ending in blade.php you can use Laravel's templating language, blade.
Now you need to finally set up another route to respond to a user page, for example http://your-app-name/public/user/22.
Route::get('user/{id}', ['uses' => 'UserController#show']);
Then add the show method to UserController
public function show($id)
{
// this will dump out the user information
return \App\User::find($id);
}
Hope that helps a little! Wrote most of it off the top of my head so let me know if you get any errors via comment.
This question is very bare, and it is difficult to actually help your situation without you showing any code. Just to point you in the right direction though, here is what you would need.
A Model called People, this is how you will access your data.
A controller. In this controller you will do the following
Get the ID of the profile you want from the functions parameters
Find that persons information e.g. People::find($person_id);
return the profile view with that persons data e.g. return view('profile')->with('person', $person);
In your view you can then use that data on that page e.g. {{ $person->name }}
For the page that needs to display the links to the people you would have a method in your controller which..
Get all the people data e.g. People::all();
Return a view with that data return view('all-people')->with('people', $people);
You will then need a route to access an individual person. The route will need to pass the persons ID into a controller method e.g.
Route::get('get-person/{id}',
[ 'as' => 'get-person',
'uses' => 'PeopleController#getPerson' ]);
You can then use this route in your view to get the links to each person
#foreach($people as $person)
{{$person->name}}
#endforeach
This would produce the list of links you want.