Package Data | |
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Maintainer Username: | usmanhalalit |
Maintainer Contact: | hi@usman.it (Muhammad Usman) |
Package Create Date: | 2017-04-19 |
Package Last Update: | 2021-03-05 |
Home Page: | |
Language: | PHP |
License: | MIT |
Last Refreshed: | 2024-11-23 03:08:34 |
Package Statistics | |
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Total Downloads: | 1,420,290 |
Monthly Downloads: | 22,197 |
Daily Downloads: | 744 |
Total Stars: | 606 |
Total Watchers: | 11 |
Total Forks: | 59 |
Total Open Issues: | 5 |
A Laravel package to easily generate CSV files from Eloquent model.
$users = User::get(); // All users
$csvExporter = new \Laracsv\Export();
$csvExporter->build($users, ['email', 'name'])->download();
And a proper CSV file will be downloaded with email
and name
fields. As simple as it sounds!
Just run this on your terminal:
composer require usmanhalalit/laracsv:^2.0
and you should be good to go.
$exporter->build($modelCollection, $fields)
takes three parameters.
First one is the model (collection of models), seconds one takes the field names
you want to export, third one is config, which is optional.
$csvExporter->build(User::get(), ['email', 'name', 'created_at']);
To get file downloaded to the browser:
$csvExporter->download();
You can provide a filename if you wish:
$csvExporter->download('active_users.csv');
If no filename is given a filename with date-time will be generated.
LaraCSV uses League CSV. You can do what League CSV is able to do. You can get the underlying League CSV writer and reader instance by calling:
$csvWriter = $csvExporter->getWriter();
$csvReader = $csvExporter->getReader();
And then you can do several things like:
$csvString = $csvWriter->getContent(); // To get the CSV as string
$csvReader->jsonSerialize(); // To turn the CSV in to an array
For more information please check League CSV documentation.
Above code example will generate a CSV with headers email, name, created_at and corresponding rows after.
If you want to change the header with a custom label just pass it as array value:
$csvExporter->build(User::get(), ['email', 'name' => 'Full Name', 'created_at' => 'Joined']);
Now name
column will show the header Full Name
but it will still take
values from name
field of the model.
You can also suppress the CSV header:
$csvExporter->build(User::get(), ['email', 'name', 'created_at'], [
'header' => false,
]);
There is a hook which is triggered before processing a database row. For example, if you want to change the date format you can do so.
$csvExporter = new \Laracsv\Export();
$users = User::get();
// Register the hook before building
$csvExporter->beforeEach(function ($user) {
$user->created_at = date('f', strtotime($user->created_at));
});
$csvExporter->build($users, ['email', 'name' => 'Full Name', 'created_at' => 'Joined']);
Note: If a beforeEach
callback returns false
then the entire row will be
excluded from the CSV. It can come handy to filter some rows.
You may also add fields that don't exists in a database table add values on the fly:
// The notes field doesn't exist so values for this field will be blank by default
$csvExporter->beforeEach(function ($user) {
// Now notes field will have this value
$user->notes = 'Add your notes';
});
$csvExporter->build($users, ['email', 'notes']);
You can also add fields in the CSV from related database tables, given the model has relationships defined.
This will get the product title and the related category's title (one to one):
$csvExporter->build($products, ['title', 'category.title']);
You may also tinker relation things as you wish with hooks:
$products = Product::with('categories')->where('order_count', '>', 10)->orderBy('order_count', 'desc')->get();
$fields = ['id', 'title','original_price' => 'Market Price', 'category_ids',];
$csvExporter = new \Laracsv\Export();
$csvExporter->beforeEach(function ($product) {
$product->category_ids = implode(', ', $product->categories->pluck('id')->toArray());
});
© Muhammad Usman. Licensed under MIT license.