Package Data | |
---|---|
Maintainer Username: | AdrianSkierniewski |
Maintainer Contact: | adrian.skierniewski@gmail.com (Adrian Skierniewski) |
Package Create Date: | 2013-12-17 |
Package Last Update: | 2018-09-15 |
Home Page: | |
Language: | PHP |
License: | MIT |
Last Refreshed: | 2024-11-19 03:22:21 |
Package Statistics | |
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Total Downloads: | 53,017 |
Monthly Downloads: | 242 |
Daily Downloads: | 11 |
Total Stars: | 132 |
Total Watchers: | 9 |
Total Forks: | 21 |
Total Open Issues: | 2 |
Eloquent Tree is a tree model for Laravel Eloquent ORM.
##Features
Version 1.0 is not compatible with 0.*
Version 2.0 - Laravel 5 support
Version 2.1 - Laravel 5.1 support
Version 3.0 - Laravel 5.3 support
Begin by installing this package through Composer. Edit your project's composer.json file to require gzero/eloquent-tree.
"require": {
"laravel/framework": "5.3.*",
"gzero/eloquent-tree": "v3.0.*"
},
"minimum-stability" : "stable"
Next, update Composer from the Terminal:
composer update
That's all now you can extend \Gzero\EloquentTree\Model\Tree in your project
Simply migration with all required columns that you could extend by adding new fields
Schema::create(
'trees',
function (Blueprint $table) {
$table->increments('id');
$table->string('path', 255)->nullable();
$table->integer('parent_id')->unsigned()->nullable();
$table->integer('level')->default(0);
$table->timestamps();
$table->index(array('path', 'parent_id', 'level'));
$table->foreign('parent_id')->references('id')->on('contents')->onDelete('CASCADE');
}
);
$root = new Tree(); // New root
$root->setAsRoot();
$child = with(new Tree())->setChildOf($root); // New child
$sibling = new Tree();
$sibling->setSiblingOf($child); // New sibling
Leaf - returning root node
$leaf->findRoot();
Children - returning flat collection of children. You can use Eloquent query builder.
$collection = $root->children()->get();
$collection2 = $root->children()->where('url', '=', 'slug')->get();
Ancestors - returning flat collection of ancestors, first is root, last is current node. You can use Eloquent query builder. Of course there are no guarantees that the structure of the tree would be complete if you do the query with additional where
$collection = $node->findAncestors()->get();
$collection2 = $node->findAncestors()->where('url', '=', 'slug')->get();
Descendants - returning flat collection of descendants, first is current node, last is leafs. You can use Eloquent query builder. Of course there are no guarantees that the structure of the tree would be complete if you do the query with additional where
$collection = $node->findDescendants()->get();
$collection2 = $node->findDescendants()->where('url', '=', 'slug')->get();
Building tree structure on PHP side - if some nodes will be missing, these branches will not be built
$treeRoot = $root->buildTree($root->findDescendants()->get())
Tree::getLeaves();
Three new roots, first with descendants
Tree::mapArray(
array(
array(
'children' => array(
array(
'children' => array(
array(
'children' => array(
array(
'children' => array()
),
array(
'children' => array()
)
)
),
array(
'children' => array()
)
)
),
array(
'children' => array()
)
)
),
array(
'children' => array()
),
array(
'children' => array()
)
)
);
You can render tree built by the function buildTree
$html = $root->render(
'ul',
function ($node) {
return '<li>' . $node->title . '{sub-tree}</li>';
},
TRUE
);
echo $html;
All tree models have additional events:
You can use them for example to update additional tables
If you enjoy my work, please consider making a small donation, so I can continue to maintain and create new software to help other users.