Package Data | |
---|---|
Maintainer Username: | mauro-moreno |
Maintainer Contact: | igasteratos@gmail.com (Giannis Gasteratos) |
Package Create Date: | 2016-08-02 |
Package Last Update: | 2016-08-03 |
Language: | PHP |
License: | MIT |
Last Refreshed: | 2024-11-22 03:14:03 |
Package Statistics | |
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Total Downloads: | 1,154 |
Monthly Downloads: | 2 |
Daily Downloads: | 0 |
Total Stars: | 0 |
Total Watchers: | 3 |
Total Forks: | 0 |
Total Open Issues: | 0 |
Fork of igaster/laravel-theme
This is a package for the Laravel 5 Framework that adds basic support for managing themes. It allows you to separate your views & your assets files in separate folders, and supports for theme extending! Awesome :)
Features:
Very simple, you create a folder for each Theme in 'resources/views' and keep all your views separated.
The same goes for assets: create a folder for each theme in your 'public' directory. Set your active theme and you are done.
The rest of your application remains theme-agnostic©, which means that when you View::make('index')
you will access the index.blade.php
from your selected theme's folder. Same goes for your assets.
install with
composer require "mauro-moreno/laravel-theme"
Add the service provider in app/config/app.php
, Providers
array:
MauroMoreno\LaravelTheme\ThemeServiceProvider::class,
also edit the Facades
array and add:
'Theme' => MauroMoreno\LaravelTheme\Facades\Theme::class,
Almost Done. You can optionally publish a configuration file to your application with
php artisan vendor:publish --provider="MauroMoreno\LaravelTheme\ThemeServiceProvider"
That's it. You are now ready to start theming your applications!
Heads up: Defining a theme is completely optional. You may not touch the config file as long as the defaults fits you!
If you want more control then you can define your themes in the themes
array in config/themes.php.
The format for every theme is very simple:
// Select a name for your theme
'theme-name' => [
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Theme to extend. Defaults to null (=none)
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
'extends' => 'theme-to-extend',
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| The path where the view are stored. Defaults to 'theme-name'
| It is relative to 'themes_path' ('/resources/views' by default)
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
'views-path' => 'path-to-views',
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| The path where the assets are stored. Defaults to 'theme-name'
| It is relative to laravels public folder (/public)
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
'asset-path' => 'path-to-assets',
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Custom configuration. You can add your own custom keys.
| Retrieve these values with Theme::config('key'). e.g.:
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
'key' => 'value',
],
all settings are optional and can be omitted. Check the example in the configuration file... If you are OK with the defaults then you don't even have to touch the configuration file. If a theme has not been registered then the default values will be used!
You can set a theme to extend an other. When you are requesting a view/asset that doesn't exist in your active theme, then it will be resolved from it's parent theme. You can easily create variations of your theme by simply overriding your views/themes that are different.
All themes fall back to the default laravel folders if a resource is not found on the theme folders.
So for example you can leave your common libraries (jquery/bootstrap ...) in your public
folder and use them from all themes.
No need to duplicate common assets for each theme!
The default theme can be configured in the theme.php
configuration file. Working with themes is very straightforward. Use:
Theme::set('theme-name'); // switch to 'theme-name'
Theme::get(); // retrieve current theme's name
Theme::current(); // retrieve current theme's object
Theme::config('key'); // read current theme's configuration value for 'key'
Theme::configSet('key','value'); // assign a key-value pair to current theme's configuration
You are free to create your own implementation to set a Theme via a ServiceProvider, or a Middleware, or even define the Theme in your Controllers.
Whenever you need the url of a local file (image/css/js etc) you can retrieve its path with:
Theme::url('path-to-file')
The path is relative to Theme Folder (NOT to public!). For example, if you have placed an image in public/theme-name/img/logo.png
your Blade code would be:
<img src="{{Theme::url('img/logo.png')}}">
When you are referring to a local file it will be looked-up in the current theme hierarchy, and the correct path will be returned.
If the file is not found on the current theme or its parents then you can define in the configuration file the action that will be carried out:
THROW_EXCEPTION
| LOG_ERROR
as warning (Default) | ASSUME_EXISTS
assumes the file does exist and returns the path | IGNORE
completely.
Some useful helpers you can use:
Theme::js('file-name')
Theme::css('file-name')
Theme::img('src', 'alt', 'class-name', ['attribute' => 'value'])
A helper middleware is included out of the box if you want to define a Theme per route. To use it:
First register it in app\Http\Kernel.php
:
protected $routeMiddleware = [
// ...
'setTheme' => \MauroMoreno\LaravelTheme\Middleware\SetTheme::class,
];
Now you can apply the middleware to a route or route-group. Eg:
Route::group(['prefix' => 'admin', 'middleware'=>'SetTheme::ADMIN_THEME'], function() {
// ... Add your routes here
// The ADMIN_THEME will be applied.
});
For a more advanced example check demo application: Set Theme in Session
You can include any configuration key of the current theme inside any path string using {curly brackets}. For example:
Theme::url('jquery-{version}.js')
if there is a "version"
key defined in the theme's configuration it will be evaluated and then the filename will be looked-up in the theme hierarchy.
(e.g: many commercial themes ship with multiple versions of the main.css for different color-schemes, or you can use language-dependent assets)
When you are namespacing your views then Laravel will look up for view files into the vendor
folder of the active theme:
view('VENDOR_NAME::viewName'); // \theme_Path\vendor\VENDOR_NAME\viewName.blade.php
You can optionally redefine each Namespace's path for each theme. Within a theme's configuration you can define the namespace-overrides
associative array:
'theme-name' => [
'namespace-overrides' => [
'ns-a' => '' // view('ns-a::viewName') = /themePath/viewName.blade.php
'ns-b' => 'modules' // view('ns-b::viewName') = /themePath/modules/viewName.blade.php
//ns-c not in array so // view('ns-c::viewName') = /themePath/vendor/ns-c/viewName.blade.php
]
// .... theme configuration
]
This package provides integration with Orchestra/Asset component. All the features are explained in the official documentation. If you don't need the extra functionality you can skip this section. Orchestra/Asset is NOT installed along with this package - you have to install it manually.
To install Orchestra\Asset you must add it in your composer.json (see the Official Documentation):
"orchestra/asset": "~3.0",
"orchestra/support": "~3.0",
and run composer update
. Then add the Service Providers in your Providers array (in app/config/app.php
):
Orchestra\Asset\AssetServiceProvider::class,
Collective\Html\HtmlServiceProvider::class,
Add the Asset facade in your aliases
array:
'Asset' => Orchestra\Support\Facades\Asset::class,
Now you can leverage all the power of Orchestra\Asset package. However the syntax can become quite cumbersome when you are using Themes + Orchestra/Asset, so some Blade-specific sugar has been added to ease your work. Here how to build your views:
In any blade file you can require a script or a css:
@css('filename')
@js('filename')
@jsIn('container-name', 'filename')
Please note that you are just defining your css/js files but not actually dumping them in html. Usually you only need write your css/js declaration in one place on the Head/Footer of you page. So open your master layout and place:
{!! Asset::styles() !!}
{!! Asset::scripts() !!}
{!! Asset::container('container-name')->scripts() !!}
exactly where you want write your declarations.
This is an Orchestra/Asset feature explained well in the official documentation. Long story short:
@css ('filename', 'alias', 'depends-on')
@js ('filename', 'alias', 'depends-on')
and your assets dependencies will be auto resolved. Your assets will be exported in the correct order. The biggest benefit of this approach is that you don't have to move all your declerations in your master layout file. Each sub-view can define it's requirements and they will auto-resolved in the correct order with no doublications. Awesome! A short example:
@js ('jquery.js', 'jquery')
@js ('bootstrap.js', 'bootsrap', jquery)
Yes with one exception: If you are building Theme hierarchies, asset's will not be looked up on the parent theme. Performing file searching on a remote repository is not the best practice. Should be addressed in a future version... However Blade templates auto-discovery works fine since they are local files.
Link directly to your external assets. Every url that starts with http(s) will not be proccesed by default.
Yes. Set the themes_path
option in themes.php
configuration file to any path. However the default Laravel views path will be used as a fallback when a view is requested and can not be located in any other folder.
Rebind Laravel's 'path.public'. (More info)
Laravel is compiling your views every-time you make an edit. A compiled view will not recompile unless you make any edit to your view. You can manually clear compiled views with artisan view:clear
.Keep this in mind while you are developing themes...