Package Data | |
---|---|
Maintainer Username: | rcrowe |
Maintainer Contact: | hello@vivalacrowe.com (Rob Crowe) |
Package Create Date: | 2012-11-23 |
Package Last Update: | 2024-09-15 |
Home Page: | |
Language: | PHP |
License: | MIT |
Last Refreshed: | 2024-12-17 03:02:26 |
Package Statistics | |
---|---|
Total Downloads: | 4,821,459 |
Monthly Downloads: | 66,492 |
Daily Downloads: | 3,387 |
Total Stars: | 895 |
Total Watchers: | 46 |
Total Forks: | 166 |
Total Open Issues: | 103 |
Allows you to use Twig seamlessly in Laravel 5.
TwigBridge >=0.7 requires Laravel 5.
If you need to support for Laravel 4.1/4.2 checkout out TwigBridge 0.6.x, or 0.5.x for Laravel 4.0.
Require this package with Composer
composer require rcrowe/twigbridge
Once Composer has installed or updated your packages you need to register TwigBridge with Laravel itself. Open up config/app.php and find the providers key, towards the end of the file, and add 'TwigBridge\ServiceProvider', to the end:
'providers' => [
...
TwigBridge\ServiceProvider::class,
],
Now find the aliases key, again towards the end of the file, and add 'Twig' => 'TwigBridge\Facade\Twig', to have easier access to the TwigBridge (or Twig\Environment):
'aliases' => [
...
'Twig' => TwigBridge\Facade\Twig::class,
],
Now that you have both of those lines added to config/app.php we will use Artisan to add the new twig config file:
php artisan vendor:publish --provider="TwigBridge\ServiceProvider"
At this point you can now begin using twig like you would any other view
//app/Http/routes.php
//twig template resources/views/hello.twig
Route::get('/', function () {
return View::make('hello');
});
You can create the twig files in resources/views with the .twig file extension.
resources/views/hello.twig
Once Composer has installed or updated your packages you need to register TwigBridge with Laravel itself. Open up config/app.php and find the providers key towards the bottom and add:
'TwigBridge\ServiceProvider',
You can add the TwigBridge Facade, to have easier access to the TwigBridge (or Twig\Environment).
'Twig' => 'TwigBridge\Facade\Twig',
Twig::addExtension('TwigBridge\Extension\Loader\Functions');
Twig::render('mytemplate', $data);
TwigBridge's configuration file can be extended in your ConfigServiceProvider, under the twigbridge
key. You can find the default configuration file at vendor/rcrowe/twigbridge/config
.
You should use Artisan to copy the default configuration file from the /vendor
directory to /config/twigbridge.php
with the following command:
php artisan vendor:publish --provider="TwigBridge\ServiceProvider"
If you make changes to the /config/twigbridge.php
file you will most likely have to run the twig:clean
Artisan command for the changes to take effect.
For Lumen, you need to load the same Service Provider, but you have to disable the Auth
, Translator
and Url
extensions in your local configuration.
Copy the config/twigbridge.php
file to your local config
folder and register the configuration + Service Provider in bootstrap/app.php
:
$app->configure('twigbridge');
$app->register('TwigBridge\ServiceProvider');
You call the Twig template like you would any other view:
// Without the file extension
View::make('i_am_twig', [...])
TwigBridge also supports views in other packages:
View::make('pagination::simple')
The above rules continue when extending another Twig template:
{% extends "parent" %}
{% extends "pagination::parent" %}
You can call functions with parameters:
{{ link_to_route('tasks.edit', 'Edit', task.id, {'class': 'btn btn-primary'}) }}
And output variables, escaped by default. Use the raw
filter to skip escaping.
{{ some_var }}
{{ html_var | raw }}
{{ long_var | str_limit(50) }}
Sometimes you want to extend / add new functions for use in Twig templates. Add to the enabled
array in config/twigbridge.php a list of extensions for Twig to load.
'enabled' => array(
'TwigBridge\Extensions\Example'
)
TwigBridge supports both a string or a closure as a callback, so for example you might implement the Assetic Twig extension as follows:
'enabled' => [
function($app) {
$factory = new Assetic\Factory\AssetFactory($app['path'].'/../some/path/');
$factory->setDebug(false);
// etc.....
return new Assetic\Extension\Twig\AsseticExtension($factory);
}
]
TwigBridge comes with the following extensions enabled by default:
To enable '0.5.x' style Facades, enable the Legacy Facades extension:
These loader extensions exposes Laravel helpers as both Twig functions and filters.
Check out the config/twigbridge.php file to see a list of defined function / filters. You can also add your own.
The FacadeLoader extension allows you to call any facade you have configured in config/twigbridge.php. This gives your Twig templates integration with any Laravel class as well as any other classes you alias.
To use the Laravel integration (or indeed any aliased class and method), just add your facades to the config and call them like URL.to(link)
(instead of URL::to($link)
)
The following helpers/filters are added by the default Extensions. They are based on the helpers and/or facades, so should be self explaining.
Functions:
Filters:
Global variables:
TwigBridge offers a command for CLI Interaction.
Empty the Twig cache:
$ php artisan twig:clean
Lint all Twig templates:
$ php artisan twig:lint