- Introduction
- Displaying Data
- Blade Directives
- Components
- Building Layouts
- Forms
- Stacks
- Service Injection
- Extending Blade
Blade is the simple, yet powerful templating engine that is included with Laravel. Unlike some PHP templating engines, Blade does not restrict you from using plain PHP code in your templates. In fact, all Blade templates are compiled into plain PHP code and cached until they are modified, meaning Blade adds essentially zero overhead to your application. Blade template files use the .blade.php
file extension and are typically stored in the resources/views
directory.
Blade views may be returned from routes or controller using the global view
helper. Of course, as mentioned in the documentation on views, data may be passed to the Blade view using the view
helper's second argument:
Route::get('/', function () {
return view('greeting', ['name' => 'Finn']);
});
{tip} Before digging deeper into Blade, make sure to read the Laravel view documentation.
You may display data that is passed to your Blade views by wrapping the variable in curly braces. For example, given the following route:
Route::get('/', function () {
return view('welcome', ['name' => 'Samantha']);
});
You may display the contents of the name
variable like so:
Hello, {{ $name }}.
{tip} Blade's
{{ }}
echo statements are automatically sent through PHP'shtmlspecialchars
function to prevent XSS attacks.
You are not limited to displaying the contents of the variables passed to the view. You may also echo the results of any PHP function. In fact, you can put any PHP code you wish inside of a Blade echo statement:
The current UNIX timestamp is {{ time() }}.
Sometimes you may pass an array to your view with the intention of rendering it as JSON in order to initialize a JavaScript variable. For example:
<script>
var app = <?php echo json_encode($array); ?>;
</script>
However, instead of manually calling json_encode
, you may use the @json
Blade directive. The @json
directive accepts the same arguments as PHP's json_encode
function. By default, the @json
directive calls the json_encode
function with the JSON_HEX_TAG
, JSON_HEX_APOS
, JSON_HEX_AMP
, and JSON_HEX_QUOT
flags:
<script>
var app = @json($array);
var app = @json($array, JSON_PRETTY_PRINT);
</script>
{note} You should only use the
@json
directive to render existing variables as JSON. The Blade templating is based on regular expressions and attempts to pass a complex expression to the directive may cause unexpected failures.
By default, Blade (and the Laravel e
helper) will double encode HTML entities. If you would like to disable double encoding, call the Blade::withoutDoubleEncoding
method from the boot
method of your AppServiceProvider
:
<?php
namespace App\Providers;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Blade;
use Illuminate\Support\ServiceProvider;
class AppServiceProvider extends ServiceProvider
{
/**
* Bootstrap any application services.
*
* @return void
*/
public function boot()
{
Blade::withoutDoubleEncoding();
}
}
By default, Blade {{ }}
statements are automatically sent through PHP's htmlspecialchars
function to prevent XSS attacks. If you do not want your data to be escaped, you may use the following syntax:
Hello, {!! $name !!}.
{note} Be very careful when echoing content that is supplied by users of your application. You should typically use the escaped, double curly brace syntax to prevent XSS attacks when displaying user supplied data.
Since many JavaScript frameworks also use "curly" braces to indicate a given expression should be displayed in the browser, you may use the @
symbol to inform the Blade rendering engine an expression should remain untouched. For example:
<h1>Laravel</h1>
Hello, @{{ name }}.
In this example, the @
symbol will be removed by Blade; however, {{ name }}
expression will remain untouched by the Blade engine, allowing it to be rendered by your JavaScript framework.
The @
symbol may also be used to escape Blade directives:
{{-- Blade template --}}
@@json()
<!-- HTML output -->
@json()
If you are displaying JavaScript variables in a large portion of your template, you may wrap the HTML in the @verbatim
directive so that you do not have to prefix each Blade echo statement with an @
symbol:
@verbatim
<div class="container">
Hello, {{ name }}.
</div>
@endverbatim
In addition to template inheritance and displaying data, Blade also provides convenient shortcuts for common PHP control structures, such as conditional statements and loops. These shortcuts provide a very clean, terse way of working with PHP control structures while also remaining familiar to their PHP counterparts.
You may construct if
statements using the @if
, @elseif
, @else
, and @endif
directives. These directives function identically to their PHP counterparts:
@if (count($records) === 1)
I have one record!
@elseif (count($records) > 1)
I have multiple records!
@else
I don't have any records!
@endif
For convenience, Blade also provides an @unless
directive:
@unless (Auth::check())
You are not signed in.
@endunless
In addition to the conditional directives already discussed, the @isset
and @empty
directives may be used as convenient shortcuts for their respective PHP functions:
@isset($records)
// $records is defined and is not null...
@endisset
@empty($records)
// $records is "empty"...
@endempty
The @auth
and @guest
directives may be used to quickly determine if the current user is authenticated or is a guest:
@auth
// The user is authenticated...
@endauth
@guest
// The user is not authenticated...
@endguest
If needed, you may specify the authentication guard that should be checked when using the @auth
and @guest
directives:
@auth('admin')
// The user is authenticated...
@endauth
@guest('admin')
// The user is not authenticated...
@endguest
You may check if the application is running in the production environment using the @production
directive:
@production
// Production specific content...
@endproduction
Or, you may determine if the application is running in a specific environment using the @env
directive:
@env('staging')
// The application is running in "staging"...
@endenv
@env(['staging', 'production'])
// The application is running in "staging" or "production"...
@endenv
You may determine if a template inheritance section has content using the @hasSection
directive:
@hasSection('navigation')
<div class="pull-right">
@yield('navigation')
</div>
<div class="clearfix"></div>
@endif
You may use the sectionMissing
directive to determine if a section does not have content:
@sectionMissing('navigation')
<div class="pull-right">
@include('default-navigation')
</div>
@endif
Switch statements can be constructed using the @switch
, @case
, @break
, @default
and @endswitch
directives:
@switch($i)
@case(1)
First case...
@break
@case(2)
Second case...
@break
@default
Default case...
@endswitch
In addition to conditional statements, Blade provides simple directives for working with PHP's loop structures. Again, each of these directives functions identically to their PHP counterparts:
@for ($i = 0; $i < 10; $i++)
The current value is {{ $i }}
@endfor
@foreach ($users as $user)
<p>This is user {{ $user->id }}</p>
@endforeach
@forelse ($users as $user)
<li>{{ $user->name }}</li>
@empty
<p>No users</p>
@endforelse
@while (true)
<p>I'm looping forever.</p>
@endwhile
{tip} When looping, you may use the loop variable to gain valuable information about the loop, such as whether you are in the first or last iteration through the loop.
When using loops you may also end the loop or skip the current iteration using the @continue
and @break
directives:
@foreach ($users as $user)
@if ($user->type == 1)
@continue
@endif
<li>{{ $user->name }}</li>
@if ($user->number == 5)
@break
@endif
@endforeach
You may also include the continuation or break condition within the directive declaration:
@foreach ($users as $user)
@continue($user->type == 1)
<li>{{ $user->name }}</li>
@break($user->number == 5)
@endforeach
When looping, a $loop
variable will be available inside of your loop. This variable provides access to some useful bits of information such as the current loop index and whether this is the first or last iteration through the loop:
@foreach ($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
If you are in a nested loop, you may access the parent loop's $loop
variable via the parent
property:
@foreach ($users as $user)
@foreach ($user->posts as $post)
@if ($loop->parent->first)
This is first iteration of the parent loop.
@endif
@endforeach
@endforeach
The $loop
variable also contains a variety of other useful properties:
Property | Description |
---|---|
$loop->index |
The index of the current loop iteration (starts at 0). |
$loop->iteration |
The current loop iteration (starts at 1). |
$loop->remaining |
The iterations remaining in the loop. |
$loop->count |
The total number of items in the array being iterated. |
$loop->first |
Whether this is the first iteration through the loop. |
$loop->last |
Whether this is the last iteration through the loop. |
$loop->even |
Whether this is an even iteration through the loop. |
$loop->odd |
Whether this is an odd iteration through the loop. |
$loop->depth |
The nesting level of the current loop. |
$loop->parent |
When in a nested loop, the parent's loop variable. |
Blade also allows you to define comments in your views. However, unlike HTML comments, Blade comments are not included in the HTML returned by your application:
{{-- This comment will not be present in the rendered HTML --}}
{tip} While you're free to use the
@include
directive, Blade components provide similar functionality and offer several benefits over the@include
directive such as data and attribute binding.
Blade's @include
directive allows you to include a Blade view from within another view. All variables that are available to the parent view will be made available to the included view:
<div>
@include('shared.errors')
<form>
<!-- Form Contents -->
</form>
</div>
Even though the included view will inherit all data available in the parent view, you may also pass an array of additional data that should be made available to the included view:
@include('view.name', ['status' => 'complete'])
If you attempt to @include
a view which does not exist, Laravel will throw an error. If you would like to include a view that may or may not be present, you should use the @includeIf
directive:
@includeIf('view.name', ['status' => 'complete'])
If you would like to @include
a view if a given boolean expression evaluates to true
or false
, you may use the @includeWhen
and @includeUnless
directives:
@includeWhen($boolean, 'view.name', ['status' => 'complete'])
@includeUnless($boolean, 'view.name', ['status' => 'complete'])
To include the first view that exists from a given array of views, you may use the includeFirst
directive:
@includeFirst(['custom.admin', 'admin'], ['status' => 'complete'])
{note} You should avoid using the
__DIR__
and__FILE__
constants in your Blade views, since they will refer to the location of the cached, compiled view.
You may combine loops and includes into one line with Blade's @each
directive:
@each('view.name', $jobs, 'job')
The @each
directive's first argument is the view to render for each element in the array or collection. The second argument is the array or collection you wish to iterate over, while the third argument is the variable name that will be assigned to the current iteration within the view. So, for example, if you are iterating over an array of jobs
, typically you will want to access each job as a job
variable within the view. The array key for the current iteration will be available as the key
variable within the view.
You may also pass a fourth argument to the @each
directive. This argument determines the view that will be rendered if the given array is empty.
@each('view.name', $jobs, 'job', 'view.empty')
{note} Views rendered via
@each
do not inherit the variables from the parent view. If the child view requires these variables, you should use the@foreach
and@include
directives instead.
The @once
directive allows you to define a portion of the template that will only be evaluated once per rendering cycle. This may be useful for pushing a given piece of JavaScript into the page's header using stacks. For example, if you are rendering a given component within a loop, you may wish to only push the JavaScript to the header the first time the component is rendered:
@once
@push('scripts')
<script>
// Your custom JavaScript...
</script>
@endpush
@endonce
Most web applications maintain the same general layout across various pages. It would be incredibly cumbersome and hard to maintain our application if we had to repeat the entire layout HTML in every view we create. Thankfully, it's convenient to define this layout as a single Blade component and then use it throughout our application.
For example, imagine we are building a "todo" list application. We might define a layout
component that looks like the following:
<!-- resources/views/components/layout.blade.php -->
<html>
<head>
<title>{{ $title ?? 'Todo Manager' }}
</head>
<body>
<h1>Todos</h1>
<hr/>
{{ $slot }}
</body>
</html>
Once the layout
component has been defined, we may create a Blade view that utilizes the component. In this example, we will define a simple view that displays our task list:
<!-- resources/views/tasks.blade.php -->
<x-layout>
@foreach ($tasks as $task)
{{ $task }}
@endforeach
</x-layout>
Remember, content that is injected into a component will be supplied to the default $slot
variable within our layout
component. As you may have noticed, our layout
also respects a $title
slot if one is provided; otherwise, a default title is shown. We may inject a custom title from our task list view using the standard slot syntax discussed in the component documentation:
<!-- resources/views/tasks.blade.php -->
<x-layout>
<x-slot name="title">
Custom Title
</x-slot>
@foreach ($tasks as $task)
{{ $task }}
@endforeach
</x-layout>
Now that we have defined our layout and task list views, we just need to return the task
view from a route:
use App\Models\Task;
Route::get('/tasks', function () {
return view('tasks', ['tasks' => Task::all()]);
});
Layouts may also be created via "template inheritance". This was the primary way of building applications prior to the introduction of components.
To get started, let's take a look at a simple example. First, we will examine a page layout. Since most web applications maintain the same general layout across various pages, it's convenient to define this layout as a single Blade view:
<!-- resources/views/layouts/app.blade.php -->
<html>
<head>
<title>App Name - @yield('title')</title>
</head>
<body>
@section('sidebar')
This is the master sidebar.
@show
<div class="container">
@yield('content')
</div>
</body>
</html>
As you can see, this file contains typical HTML mark-up. However, take note of the @section
and @yield
directives. The @section
directive, as the name implies, defines a section of content, while the @yield
directive is used to display the contents of a given section.
Now that we have defined a layout for our application, let's define a child page that inherits the layout.
When defining a child view, use the @extends
Blade directive to specify which layout the child view should "inherit". Views which extend a Blade layout may inject content into the layout's sections using @section
directives. Remember, as seen in the example above, the contents of these sections will be displayed in the layout using @yield
:
<!-- resources/views/child.blade.php -->
@extends('layouts.app')
@section('title', 'Page Title')
@section('sidebar')
@@parent
<p>This is appended to the master sidebar.</p>
@endsection
@section('content')
<p>This is my body content.</p>
@endsection
In this example, the sidebar
section is utilizing the @@parent
directive to append (rather than overwriting) content to the layout's sidebar. The @@parent
directive will be replaced by the content of the layout when the view is rendered.
{tip} Contrary to the previous example, this
sidebar
section ends with@endsection
instead of@show
. The@endsection
directive will only define a section while@show
will define and immediately yield the section.
The @yield
directive also accepts a default value as its second parameter. This value will be rendered if the section being yielded is undefined:
@yield('content', 'Default content')
Anytime you define an HTML form in your application, you should include a hidden CSRF token field in the form so that the CSRF protection middleware can validate the request. You may use the @csrf
Blade directive to generate the token field:
<form method="POST" action="/profile">
@csrf
...
</form>
Since HTML forms can't make PUT
, PATCH
, or DELETE
requests, you will need to add a hidden _method
field to spoof these HTTP verbs. The @method
Blade directive can create this field for you:
<form action="/foo/bar" method="POST">
@method('PUT')
...
</form>
The @error
directive may be used to quickly check if validation error messages exist for a given attribute. Within an @error
directive, you may echo the $message
variable to display the error message:
<!-- /resources/views/post/create.blade.php -->
<label for="title">Post Title</label>
<input id="title" type="text" class="@error('title') is-invalid @enderror">
@error('title')
<div class="alert alert-danger">{{ $message }}</div>
@enderror
You may pass the name of a specific error bag as the second parameter to the @error
directive to retrieve validation error messages on pages containing multiple forms:
<!-- /resources/views/auth.blade.php -->
<label for="email">Email address</label>
<input id="email" type="email" class="@error('email', 'login') is-invalid @enderror">
@error('email', 'login')
<div class="alert alert-danger">{{ $message }}</div>
@enderror
In some situations, it's useful to embed PHP code into your views. You can use the Blade @php
directive to execute a block of plain PHP within your template:
@php
$counter = 1;
@endphp
Components and slots provide similar benefits to sections, layouts, and includes; however, some may find the mental model of components and slots easier to understand. There are two approaches to writing components: class based components and anonymous components.
To create a class based component, you may use the make:component
Artisan command. To illustrate how to use components, we will create a simple Alert
component. The make:component
command will place the component in the App\View\Components
directory:
php artisan make:component Alert
The make:component
command will also create a view template for the component. The view will be placed in the resources/views/components
directory. When writing components for your own application, components are automatically discovered within the app/View/Components
directory and resources/views/components
directory, so no further component registration is typically required.
You may also create components within subdirectories:
php artisan make:component Forms/Input
The command above will create an Input
component in the App\View\Components\Forms
directory and the view will be placed in the resources/views/components/forms
directory.
When writing components for your own application, components are automatically discovered within the app/View/Components
directory and resources/views/components
directory.
However, if you are building a package that utilizes Blade components, you will need to manually register your component class and its HTML tag alias. You should typically register your components in the boot
method of your package's service provider:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Blade;
/**
* Bootstrap your package's services.
*/
public function boot()
{
Blade::component('package-alert', AlertComponent::class);
}
Once your component has been registered, it may be rendered using its tag alias:
<x-package-alert/>
Alternatively, you may use the componentNamespace
method to autoload component classes by convention. For example, a Nightshade
package might have Calendar
and ColorPicker
components that reside within the Package\Views\Components
namespace:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Blade;
/**
* Bootstrap your package's services.
*
* @return void
*/
public function boot()
{
Blade::componentNamespace('Nightshade\\Views\\Components', 'nightshade');
}
This will allow the usage of package components by their vendor namespace using the package-name::
syntax:
<x-nightshade::calendar />
<x-nightshade::color-picker />
Blade will automatically detect the class that's linked to this component by pascal-casing the component name. Subdirectories are also supported using "dot" notation.
To display a component, you may use a Blade component tag within one of your Blade templates. Blade component tags start with the string x-
followed by the kebab case name of the component class:
<x-alert/>
<x-user-profile/>
If the component class is nested deeper within the App\View\Components
directory, you may use the .
character to indicate directory nesting. For example, if we assume a component is located at App\View\Components\Inputs\Button.php
, we may render it like so:
<x-inputs.button/>
You may pass data to Blade components using HTML attributes. Hard-coded, primitive values may be passed to the component using simple HTML attribute strings. PHP expressions and variables should be passed to the component via attributes that use the :
character as a prefix:
<x-alert type="error" :message="$message"/>
You should define the component's required data in its class constructor. All public properties on a component will automatically be made available to the component's view. It is not necessary to pass the data to the view from the component's render
method:
<?php
namespace App\View\Components;
use Illuminate\View\Component;
class Alert extends Component
{
/**
* The alert type.
*
* @var string
*/
public $type;
/**
* The alert message.
*
* @var string
*/
public $message;
/**
* Create the component instance.
*
* @param string $type
* @param string $message
* @return void
*/
public function __construct($type, $message)
{
$this->type = $type;
$this->message = $message;
}
/**
* Get the view / contents that represent the component.
*
* @return \Illuminate\View\View|\Closure|string
*/
public function render()
{
return view('components.alert');
}
}
When your component is rendered, you may display the contents of your component's public variables by echoing the variables by name:
<div class="alert alert-{{ $type }}">
{{ $message }}
</div>
Component constructor arguments should be specified using camelCase
, while kebab-case
should be used when referencing the argument names in your HTML attributes. For example, given the following component constructor:
/**
* Create the component instance.
*
* @param string $alertType
* @return void
*/
public function __construct($alertType)
{
$this->alertType = $alertType;
}
The $alertType
argument may be provided to the component like so:
<x-alert alert-type="danger" />
In addition to public variables being available to your component template, any public methods on the component may be invoked. For example, imagine a component that has a isSelected
method:
/**
* Determine if the given option is the current selected option.
*
* @param string $option
* @return bool
*/
public function isSelected($option)
{
return $option === $this->selected;
}
You may execute this method from your component template by invoking the variable matching the name of the method:
<option {{ $isSelected($value) ? 'selected="selected"' : '' }} value="{{ $value }}">
{{ $label }}
</option>
Blade components also allow you to access the component name, attributes, and slot inside the class's render method. However, in order to access this data, you should return a closure from your component's render
method. The closure will receive a $data
array as its only argument. This array will contain several elements that provide information about the component:
/**
* Get the view / contents that represent the component.
*
* @return \Illuminate\View\View|\Closure|string
*/
public function render()
{
return function (array $data) {
// $data['componentName'];
// $data['attributes'];
// $data['slot'];
return '<div>Components content</div>';
};
}
The componentName
is equal to the name used in the HTML tag after the x-
prefix. So <x-alert />
's componentName
will be alert
. The attributes
element will contain all of the attributes that were present on the HTML tag. The slot
element is an Illuminate\Support\HtmlString
instance with the contents of the component's slot.
The closure should return a string. If the returned string corresponds to an existing view, that view will be rendered; otherwise, the returned string will be evaluated as an inline Blade view.
If your component requires dependencies from Laravel's service container, you may list them before any of the component's data attributes and they will automatically be injected by the container:
use App\Services\AlertCreator
/**
* Create the component instance.
*
* @param \App\Services\AlertCreator $creator
* @param string $type
* @param string $message
* @return void
*/
public function __construct(AlertCreator $creator, $type, $message)
{
$this->creator = $creator;
$this->type = $type;
$this->message = $message;
}
We've already examined how to pass data attributes to a component; however, sometimes you may need to specify additional HTML attributes, such as class
, that are not part of the data required for a component to function. Typically, you want to pass these additional attributes down to the root element of the component template. For example, imagine we want to render an alert
component like so:
<x-alert type="error" :message="$message" class="mt-4"/>
All of the attributes that are not part of the component's constructor will automatically be added to the component's "attribute bag". This attribute bag is automatically made available to the component via the $attributes
variable. All of the attributes may be rendered within the component by echoing this variable:
<div {{ $attributes }}>
<!-- Component content -->
</div>
{note} Using directives such as
@env
within component tags is not supported at this time. For example,<x-alert :live="@env('production')"/>
will not be compiled.
Sometimes you may need to specify default values for attributes or merge additional values into some of the component's attributes. To accomplish this, you may use the attribute bag's merge
method. This method is particularly useful for defining a set a default CSS classes that should always be applied to a component:
<div {{ $attributes->merge(['class' => 'alert alert-'.$type]) }}>
{{ $message }}
</div>
If we assume this component is utilized like so:
<x-alert type="error" :message="$message" class="mb-4"/>
The final, rendered HTML of the component will appear like the following:
<div class="alert alert-error mb-4">
<!-- Contents of the $message variable -->
</div>
When merging attributes that are not class
attributes, the values provided to the merge
method will be considered the "default" values of attribute. However, unlike the class
attribute, these attributes will not be merged with injected attribute values. Instead, they will be overwritten. For example, a button
component's implementation may look like the following:
<button {{ $attributes->merge(['type' => 'button']) }}>
{{ $slot }}
</button>
To render the button component with a custom type
, it may be specified when consuming the component. If no type is specified, the button
type will be used:
<x-button type="submit">
Submit
</x-button>
The rendered HTML of the button
component in this example would be:
<button type="submit">
Submit
</button>
If you would like an attribute other than class
to have its default value and injected values joined together, you may use the prepends
method. In this example, the data-controller
attribute will always begin with profile-controller
and any additional injected data-controller
values will be placed after this default value:
<div {{ $attributes->merge(['data-controller' => $attributes->prepends('profile-controller')]) }}>
{{ $slot }}
</div>
You may filter attributes using the filter
method. This method accepts a closure which should return true
if you wish to retain the attribute in the attribute bag:
{{ $attributes->filter(fn ($value, $key) => $key == 'foo') }}
For convenience, you may use the whereStartsWith
method to retrieve all attributes whose keys begin with a given string:
{{ $attributes->whereStartsWith('wire:model') }}
Using the first
method, you may render the first attribute in a given attribute bag:
{{ $attributes->whereStartsWith('wire:model')->first() }}
You will often need to pass additional content to your component via "slots". Component slots are rendered by echoing the $slot
variable. To explore this concept, let's imagine that an alert
component has the following markup:
<!-- /resources/views/components/alert.blade.php -->
<div class="alert alert-danger">
{{ $slot }}
</div>
We may pass content to the slot
by injecting content into the component:
<x-alert>
<strong>Whoops!</strong> Something went wrong!
</x-alert>
Sometimes a component may need to render multiple different slots in different locations within the component. Let's modify our alert component to allow for the injection of a "title" slot:
<!-- /resources/views/components/alert.blade.php -->
<span class="alert-title">{{ $title }}</span>
<div class="alert alert-danger">
{{ $slot }}
</div>
You may define the content of the named slot using the x-slot
tag. Any content not within an explicit x-slot
tag will be passed to the component in the $slot
variable:
<x-alert>
<x-slot name="title">
Server Error
</x-slot>
<strong>Whoops!</strong> Something went wrong!
</x-alert>
If you have used a JavaScript framework such as Vue, you may be familiar with "scoped slots", which allow you to access data or methods from the component within your slot. You may achieve similar behavior in Laravel by defining public methods or properties on your component and accessing the component within your slot via the $component
variable. In this example, we will assume that the x-alert
component has a public formatAlert
method defined on its component class:
<x-alert>
<x-slot name="title">
{{ $component->formatAlert('Server Error') }}
</x-slot>
<strong>Whoops!</strong> Something went wrong!
</x-alert>
For very small components, it may feel cumbersome to manage both the component class and the component's view template. For this reason, you may return the component's markup directly from the render
method:
/**
* Get the view / contents that represent the component.
*
* @return \Illuminate\View\View|\Closure|string
*/
public function render()
{
return <<<'blade'
<div class="alert alert-danger">
{{ $slot }}
</div>
blade;
}
To create a component that renders an inline view, you may use the inline
option when executing the make:component
command:
php artisan make:component Alert --inline
Similar to inline components, anonymous components provide a mechanism for managing a component via a single file. However, anonymous components utilize a single view file and have no associated class. To define an anonymous component, you only need to place a Blade template within your resources/views/components
directory. For example, assuming you have defined a component at resources/views/components/alert.blade.php
, you may simply render it like so:
<x-alert/>
You may use the .
character to indicate if a component is nested deeper inside the components
directory. For example, assuming the component is defined at resources/views/components/inputs/button.blade.php
, you may render it like so:
<x-inputs.button/>
Since anonymous components do not have any associated class, you may wonder how you may differentiate which data should be passed to the component as variables and which attributes should be placed in the component's attribute bag.
You may specify which attributes should be considered data variables using the @props
directive at the top of your component's Blade template. All other attributes on the component will be available via the component's attribute bag. If you wish to give a data variable a default value, you may specify the variable's name as the array key and the default value as the array value:
<!-- /resources/views/components/alert.blade.php -->
@props(['type' => 'info', 'message'])
<div {{ $attributes->merge(['class' => 'alert alert-'.$type]) }}>
{{ $message }}
</div>
Given the component definition above, we may render the component like so:
<x-alert type="error" :message="$message" class="mb-4"/>
Sometimes you may need to render a component but not know which component should be rendered until runtime. In this situation, you may use Laravel's built-in dynamic-component
component to render the component based on a runtime value or variable:
<x-dynamic-component :component="$componentName" class="mt-4" />
{note} The following documentation on manually registering components is primarily applicable to those who are writing Laravel packages that include view components. If you are not writing a package, this portion of the component documentation may not be relevant to you.
When writing components for your own application, components are automatically discovered within the app/View/Components
directory and resources/views/components
directory.
However, if you are building a package that utilizes Blade components or placing components in non-conventional directories, you will need to manually register your component class and its HTML tag alias so that Laravel knows where to find the component. You should typically register your components in the boot
method of your package's service provider:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Blade;
use VendorPackage\View\Components\AlertComponent;
/**
* Bootstrap your package's services.
*
* @return void
*/
public function boot()
{
Blade::component('package-alert', AlertComponent::class);
}
Once your component has been registered, it may be rendered using its tag alias:
<x-package-alert/>
Alternatively, you may use the componentNamespace
method to autoload component classes by convention. For example, a Nightshade
package might have Calendar
and ColorPicker
components that reside within the Package\Views\Components
namespace:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Blade;
/**
* Bootstrap your package's services.
*
* @return void
*/
public function boot()
{
Blade::componentNamespace('Nightshade\\Views\\Components', 'nightshade');
}
This will allow the usage of package components by their vendor namespace using the package-name::
syntax:
<x-nightshade::calendar />
<x-nightshade::color-picker />
Blade will automatically detect the class that's linked to this component by pascal-casing the component name. Subdirectories are also supported using "dot" notation.
Blade allows you to push to named stacks which can be rendered somewhere else in another view or layout. This can be particularly useful for specifying any JavaScript libraries required by your child views:
@push('scripts')
<script src="/example.js"></script>
@endpush
You may push to a stack as many times as needed. To render the complete stack contents, pass the name of the stack to the @stack
directive:
<head>
<!-- Head Contents -->
@stack('scripts')
</head>
If you would like to prepend content onto the beginning of a stack, you should use the @prepend
directive:
@push('scripts')
This will be second...
@endpush
// Later...
@prepend('scripts')
This will be first...
@endprepend
The @inject
directive may be used to retrieve a service from the Laravel service container. The first argument passed to @inject
is the name of the variable the service will be placed into, while the second argument is the class or interface name of the service you wish to resolve:
@inject('metrics', 'App\Services\MetricsService')
<div>
Monthly Revenue: {{ $metrics->monthlyRevenue() }}.
</div>
Blade allows you to define your own custom directives using the directive
method. When the Blade compiler encounters the custom directive, it will call the provided callback with the expression that the directive contains.
The following example creates a @datetime($var)
directive which formats a given $var
, which should be an instance of DateTime
:
<?php
namespace App\Providers;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Blade;
use Illuminate\Support\ServiceProvider;
class AppServiceProvider extends ServiceProvider
{
/**
* Register any application services.
*
* @return void
*/
public function register()
{
//
}
/**
* Bootstrap any application services.
*
* @return void
*/
public function boot()
{
Blade::directive('datetime', function ($expression) {
return "<?php echo ($expression)->format('m/d/Y H:i'); ?>";
});
}
}
As you can see, we will chain the format
method onto whatever expression is passed into the directive. So, in this example, the final PHP generated by this directive will be:
<?php echo ($var)->format('m/d/Y H:i'); ?>
{note} After updating the logic of a Blade directive, you will need to delete all of the cached Blade views. The cached Blade views may be removed using the
view:clear
Artisan command.
Programming a custom directive is sometimes more complex than necessary when defining simple, custom conditional statements. For that reason, Blade provides a Blade::if
method which allows you to quickly define custom conditional directives using closures. For example, let's define a custom conditional that checks the configured default "disk" for the application. We may do this in the boot
method of our AppServiceProvider
:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Blade;
/**
* Bootstrap any application services.
*
* @return void
*/
public function boot()
{
Blade::if('disk', function ($value) {
return config('filesystems.default') === $value;
});
}
Once the custom conditional has been defined, you can use it within your templates:
@disk('local')
<!-- The application is using the local disk... -->
@elsedisk('s3')
<!-- The application is using the s3 disk... -->
@else
<!-- The application is using some other disk... -->
@enddisk
@unlessdisk('local')
<!-- The application is not using the local disk... -->
@enddisk