How to handle Undefined Offset in laravel? - php

I am getting this error when I land on the page after logging in:
ErrorException in compiled.php line 11573: Undefined offset: 0 (View:
C:\xampp\htdocs\campusguru\resources\views\home.blade.php)
I know that the cause of this error is the empty variable that I passed to the view.
I have already tried:
if(isset($blog)) { do something }
and in blade view as:
{{ $blogs[0]->title or '' }}
Is there anyway I could handle this error. Or is there a better way of doing it?

Try the following:
{{ isset($blogs[0]) ? $blogs[0]->title : '' }}
If you are using a foreach to get every $blog->title use
#foreach ($blogs as $blog)
{{ $blog->title }}
#endforeach

The problem is that $blogs is actually defined and its value is [] (i.e. empty array) so it means that isset($blogs) statement will evaluate to true. Same thing is valid for collections. If a collection is empty (i.e. has no elements but it's defined) isset($blogs) will still evaluate to true but accessing $blogs[0] will cause an Undefined offset: 0 error.
You could try the following solutions:
Using count
if(count($blogs)) { /* do something */ }
if $blogs = [] or $blogs = null the function count will return zero so that means that $blogs is empty.
Using empty
if(!empty($blogs)) { /* do something */ }
This is the equivalent of writing !isset($var) || $var == false as described in the PHP Manual - empty:
Returns FALSE if var exists and has a non-empty, non-zero
value. Otherwise returns TRUE.
The following things are considered to be empty: "" (an
empty string) 0 (0 as an integer) 0.0 (0 as a
float) "0" (0 as a string) NULL
FALSE array() (an empty array) $var; (a
variable declared, but without a value)
Checking if a collection is empty
If $blogs is a Collection is sufficient to check if it is not empty using `isNotEmpty() method:
#if($blogs->isNotEmpty()) <!-- Do your stuff --> #endif
EDIT
I forgot to add the blade syntax:
#if(count($blogs)) <!-- Do whatever you like --> #endif
or
#if(!empty($blogs)) <!-- Do whatever you like --> #endif
EDIT 2
I'm adding more content to this answer in order to address some of the issues presented in the comments. I think that your problem is the following:
$blogs is an empty collection, so it's defined but it has no elements. For this reason the if(isset($blogs)) statement will evaluate to true passing the first if condition. In your blade template you are making the check {{ $blogs[0]->title or '' }} that is absolutely not equal to <?php isset($blogs[0]->title) ? $blogs[0]->title : '' ?> as pointed out in the comments, but it is an expression that will return true or false, so it will never print out title parameter even if $blogs[0] exists. The problem here is that when checking the condition $blogs[0]->title you are actually accessing the element 0 of the $blogs collection that will trigger the exception Undefined offset: 0 because the collection is actually empty. What i was saying is that in addition to the
if(count($blogs)) { /* do something */ }
(that checks that $blogs is set and that it's length is greater than 0) in your template you should do
{{ isset($blogs[0]->title) ? $blogs[0]->title : '' }}
or more concisely
{{ $blogs[0]->title ?: '' }}
assuming that the control flow will arrive there only if the $blogs passed the first if. If the issue still persists the problem is elsewhere in your code IMHO.

You can simply solve this with the data_get() helper.
For example:
php artisan tink
Psy Shell v0.8.11 (PHP 7.0.22-0ubuntu0.16.04.1 — cli) by Justin Hileman
>>>
>>> $a = collect([[], null, App\Models\User::find(1)]);
=> Illuminate\Support\Collection {#887
all: [
[],
null,
App\Models\User {#896
id: 1,
name: "user1",
email: "user1#thisisdevelopment.nl",
last_name: "Gabrielle",
first_name: "Rempel",
deleted_at: null,
created_at: "2017-08-12 15:32:01",
updated_at: "2017-09-05 12:23:54",
},
],
}
>>> data_get($a[0], 'name', 'nope');
=> "nope"
>>> data_get($a[1], 'name', 'nope');
=> "nope"
>>> data_get($a[2], 'name', 'nope');
=> "user1"
>>>
So in this case:
{{ data_get($blogs[0], 'title', '') }}
data_get() will work both on arrays and objects, returning the key or attribute defined in the second param (this can be laravel.dot.notation.style, or just an array), the 3rd param will be the default return value if the object/array or the key/attribute does not exist, the default is null.
Edit:
Just saw the request for the extra explanation on why the original code wasn't working.
Index 0 simply does not exist on the array/collection that is passed to the view.
>>> $a = [1 => App\Models\User::find(1)];
=> [
1 => App\Models\User {#890
id: 1,
name: "user1",
// ... etc
},
]
>>> $a[0]->name ?: 'nope';
PHP error: Undefined offset: 0 on line 1
>>> $a[1]->name ?: 'nope';
=> "user1"
It doesn't matter if OP used the blade or default, it doesn't even make it to the ternary statement because of the missing 0 index on $blogs.
Edit 2 as requested:
So the reason you get the Undefined offset: x error is because of the order in which PHP evaluates the code.
Blade's or default is behind the scenes nothing more than a ternary statement:
return preg_replace('/^(?=\$)(.+?)(?:\s+or\s+)(.+?)$/si', 'isset($1) ? $1 : $2', $value);
So this will make:
isset($blogs[0]->title) ? $blogs[0]->title : ''
isset() will check if title on the object is set, but to do so, it will require $blogs[0] to be a valid object. In order to do that, it will try and get the object from the $blogs array at index 0. But since this index does not exist, it will trigger the Exception with an Undefined offset: 0.
In order to make this work with Blade's or default, you would first have to ensure that $blogs[0] is defined (and preferably also check that it's an object, otherwise you'll get the trying to get property of non-object error, please note that this should not be the responsibility of the view), after that you would be able to use the or default as you would any other time.
#if (isset($blogs[0]) && is_object($blogs[0]))
{{ $blogs[0]->title or '' }}
#else
// some other default placeholder
#endif
Basically you will get the same offset error when using data_get(), because index 0 still does not exist.
{{ data_get($blogs[0], 'title', '') }} // Undefined offset: 0
You could play dirty and do this (this would not pass any code review anywhere and I should not have typed this at all, this is just to illustrate)
{{ data_get($blogs, '0.title', '') }} // Will display '' as it will check if key 0 exists
Anyway, with data_get() you would still end up doing something like this, as you would need to make sure $blogs[0] is something you can work with:
#if (isset($blogs[0]))
{{ data_get($blogs[0], 'title', '') }}
#else
// some other default placeholder
#endif
Bottomline, the best option would be not to rely on indexes like this in your view, this is simply not the responsibility of your view.
Blade's or default works perfectly on single variables, but when dealing with object attributes, you would just have to make sure the (parent) object exists when doing so.

I do this way in controller:
if (empty($allFares) || count($allFares)==0){
return back()->withError('No Fare Found For The City!');
}
OR in blade:
#if (!empty($allFares) || count($allFares)>0)
#foreach(allFares as $key=>$value)
#endforeach
#endif

If you have an object that's passed to the view and let's say your data is "posts" which is being held inside an object like this:
$obj->posts.
If you then go and do a foreach loop which would iterate trough every post and print out its parameters like in the example below it works perfectly well when you actually have posts.
#foreach($obj->posts as $post)
<h1>$post->title</h1>
<p>$post->content</p>
#endforeach
Before doing the loop you'd want to check if attribute has been set with values. You can use isset() for this, and since it's a special form it can be used as isset($obj->posts) or isset($obj->posts[0]). The difference is that the latter will only check if the array key has any value so if your index key is anything but 0, it'll return false. For instance you have:
$foo = ['first' => somevalue1, 'second' => somevalue2];
isset($foo[0]); //returns false
isset($foo['first']); //returns true
isset($foo); //returns true
The way I'd make the check is the following:
#if(isset($obj->posts))
#foreach($obj->posts as $post)
...
#endoforeach
#endif

As of PHP7 you can use null coalescing operator ?? for checking ternary conditions:
#if($posts?? '')
#foreach($posts as $post)
<h1>$post->title</h1>
<p>$post->content</p>
#endforeach
#endif
And if you want to print any variable directly then check first that the variable exists or not in condition, so you can do as below:
{{ $blogs && $blogs[0]->title ? $blogs[0]->title : '' }}

For simply solving the issue use the # operator (error control operator)
{{ #$blogs[0]->title }}
The # error control operator (also called STFU operator with mixed feelings), that suppresses errors just for the expression that immediately follows.

Related

Compare string value against array of strings in PHP/ Laravel?

I want to match string with array. I am retrieving the status code from status table in the database...I have a json file with code and name...Based on the status code returned from db i need to match this code in json file and display the status name in foreach
Please anyone help
Thanks
statuscodes array
[
{
"code":"0",
"name":"AB"
},
{
"code":"1",
"name":"CD"
},
{
"code":"2",
"name":"XY"
},
{
"code":"10",
"name":"EF"
},
{
"code":"12",
"name":"FG"
}
]
<?php $findproducts = \DB::table('status')->select('id', 'status_name', 'ab', 'status_code','created_at')->where('ab', $track->ab)->orderBy('id', 'DESC')->get(); ?>
String Pos....
#foreach($findproducts as $pr)
#if($statuscodes != null)
#foreach ($statuscodes as $stcode)
#if (strpos($pr->status_code, $stcode['code']) !== FALSE)
{{ $stcode['name']." " .$stcode['code'] }}
#endif
#endforeach
#endif
#endforeach
The output which i am getting from above is
CD 1 XY 2 FG 12
CD 1 AB 0 EF 10
XY 2
CD 1
AB 0
Expected Output should be
FG 12
EF 10
XY 2
CD 1
AB 0
Why are you doing:
#if (strpos($pr->status_code, $stcode['code']) !== FALSE)
{{ $stcode['name']." ".$stcode['code'] }}
#endif
Instead of:
#if ($pr->status_code === $stcode['code'])
{{ $stcode['name']." ".$stcode['code'] }}
#endif
I think your problem is strpos (I am not sure why you are using it). As the documentation says: Prior to PHP 8.0.0, if needle is not a string, it is converted to an integer and applied as the ordinal value of a character. This behavior is deprecated as of PHP 7.3.0, and relying on it is highly discouraged. Depending on the intended behavior, the needle should either be explicitly cast to string, or an explicit call to chr() should be performed.
I am not sure if your needle is being used as a number so it is messing things up...
Also, when the if is true and you print what you want, you can break the foreach so you don't waste time nor effort on iterating something that you know will never be true again until something changes. You can do so using #break.
#if($statuscodes != null)
#foreach($findproducts as $pr)
#foreach ($statuscodes as $stcode)
#if ($pr->status_code === $stcode['code'])
{{ $stcode['name']." ".$stcode['code'] }}
#break
#endif
#endforeach
#endforeach
#endif
See also that I have switched the foreach with the first if, because if you do not have $statuscodes, why are you going to iterate $findproducts and skip everything ? Don't even iterate it...
try this , it is more cleaner
first convert status code to collection and convert it so collection of key=> value pairs
this should be the status code collection
then look up your key using simple foreach loop.
Note I am not sure what is returned from database so you can change the code to suite the desired output.
also try to avoid nested loops as much as you can
$status_code = collect(json_decode('[
{
"code":"0",
"name":"AB"
},
{
"code":"1",
"name":"CD"
},
{
"code":"2",
"name":"XY"
},
{
"code":"10",
"name":"EF"
},
{
"code":"12",
"name":"FG"
}]'
,true))->pluck('code','name');
#foreach($findproducts as $pr)
{{$pr->status_code ." ". $status_code[$pr->status_code]}}
#endforeach

Outputting a null var in a if statement?

I am returned either a 1 or null from a method in a third party package. I need to check this in a vue template statement like so:
v-if="{{ $myVar }} || {{ $thirdPartVar }}"
Either var needs to be true.
The issue is when the $thirdPartyVar is null, the statement errors as there is nothing after the ||.
How can I output a null var to be true or false in this situation?
The error is: - invalid expression: Unexpected token }
You should remove the extra brackets because it's not a valid vue template syntax
v-if="$myVar || $thirdPartVar"

Check if null and empty string in Laravel view

in my view I have to output separately the one that is null and the one that is empty string
so i have this:
#if( $str->a == null)
... // do somethin
#endif
#if( $str->a == '')
... // do somethin
#endif
the problem is they the same result.
Thanks
In the comments you've said you only want to check if it is null. So, use is_null():
#if (is_null($str->a))
// do somethin
#endif
#if( !empty($str->a))
... // do somethin
#endif
This are consider for empty
The following things are considered to be empty:
"" (an empty string)
0 (0 as an integer)
0.0 (0 as a float)
"0" (0 as a string)
NULL
FALSE
array() (an empty array)
$var; (a variable declared, but without a value)
You can try this
#isset($str->a)
// $str->a is defined and is not null...
#endisset
#empty($str->a)
// $str->a is "empty"...
#endempty
If Statements Laravel docs
$str->a can't be null and '' at the same time. Have you tried #elseif?
#if( is_null($str->a))
... // do somethin
#elseif( $str->a == '')
... // do somethin
#endif
actually, it should only shows the ones that is null and not the one that is empty.
It sounds like you want to check if $str->a is a valid string or not. As suggested in comments by #GrumpyCrouton you can use empty().
#if( empty($str->a))
... // do somethin
#endif

Check if variable exist in laravel's blade directive

I'm trying to create blade directive which echo variable (if variable defined) or echo "no data" if variable undefined.
This is my code in AppServiceProvider.php:
<?php
namespace App\Providers;
use Blade;
use Illuminate\Support\ServiceProvider;
class AppServiceProvider extends ServiceProvider
{
/**
* Bootstrap any application services.
*
* #return void
*/
public function boot()
{
Blade::directive('p', function($ex) {
error_log(print_r($ex,true));
return '<?php $defined_vars = get_defined_vars(); if(array_key_exists(\''. $ex .'\', $defined_vars) ): echo ' . $ex . ' ; else: echo \'no data\'; endif;?>';
});
}
/**
* Register any application services.
*
* #return void
*/
public function register()
{
//
}
}
Here is my index.blade.php:
<p class="lead">#p($myvar)</p>
But my directive "p" gives "no data" if variable defined.
If I use isset error occurres: Cannot use isset() on the result of an expression (you can use "null !== expression" instead)
How could I check inside directives if variable defined?
Blade has a directive to check if a variable is set:
#isset($var)
#endisset
Try checking if the variable is empty:
#if(empty($myvar))
<p>Data does not exist</p>
#else
<p>Your data is here!</p>
#endif
Can also check this thread
For Laravel 5.7 onwards use.
{{ $checkvariable ?? 'not-exist' }}
You can use in Blade functionality for checking isset i.e
{{ $checkvariable or 'not-exist' }}
https://laravel.com/docs/5.2/blade#displaying-data
For Laravel version >=5.7
{{ $value ?? '' }}
For Laravel version <5.7
{{ $value or '' }}
The best and cleanest way check if a variable exists in blade:
{!! !empty($myvariable) ? $myvariable : 'variable does not exist' !!}
You can use the #isset blade directive to check whether the variable is set or not. Alternatively, if you have the default value for that variable you can directly use it as {{ $vatiable ?? 'default_value' }}. The ?? way is available in Laravel v5.7 onwards.
If you want to check for multiple variables at once, you can do it by applying AND operation to expression as #if(isset($var_one) && isset($var_two)).
There are also other ways (lengthy) using #if directive as #if(isset($variable)) but it's not recommended.
Some developer uses # symbol for error control in a similar situation. The at-sign (#) is used as error control operator in PHP. When an expression is prepended with the # sign, error messages that might be generated by that expression will be ignored. If the track_errors feature is enabled, an error message generated by the expression and it will be saved in the variable $php_errormsg. This variable will be overwritten on each error. The use of # is very bad programming practice as it does not make the error disappear, it just hides them, and it makes debugging a lot worse since we can’t see what’s actually wrong with our code.
You can do it in few different ways.
Sample-1:
#if( !empty($data['var']))
{{ $data['var'] }}
#endif
Sample-2:
{{ $data['var'] or 'no data found' }}
Sample-3: Using ternary operator
<a href="" class="{{ ( ! empty($data['var'] ? $data['var'] : 'no data found') }}">
For the last version of Larvael make the variable optional in the blade template.
Replace $myvar with
{{ $myvar }} with {{ $myvar?? '' }}
What are you trying to pass to your custom directive? If it's just a string/int the following should work.
Blade::directive('p', function($expression){
$output = $expression ? $expression : 'nodata';
return "<?php echo {$output}; ?>";
});
In Blade Template
#p('Foo')
The #empty directive might be useful:
#empty($var)
$var is unset or false-y
#endempty
To check if variable exist in Laravel blade directive, do this:
Blade::directive('datetime', function ($value) {
return "<?php echo isset($value) ? ($value)->format('d/m/Y H:i:s') : null; ?>";
});
If you trying check a bool variable you can use #unless
<input type="text" class="#unless ($variable) d-none #endunless" >

Twig get url parameter with []

I have an url like : MYURL?filter[_per_page]=25&filter[name][value]=hello
How can i get these parameters with twig ?
I'm trying {{ app.request.get('filter[_per_page]') }} but it's always empty...
Thanks !
Edit : I'm in javascript an i want to assign this result to a javascript variable like : var param = "{{ app.request.get('filter[_per_page]') }}";
You must manage as an array accessing to the filter element as:
{{ app.request.get('filter')['_per_page'] }}
(This time I try before posting...)
You've almost got it.
app object is GlobalVariables instance. When you say app.request, getRequest() is being invoked and returns an instance of standard Request object.
Now if you look at Request::get() (link) there is:
get(string $key, mixed $default = null, bool $deep = false)
I think what you need to do is this:
{{ app.request.get('filter[_per_page]', NULL, true) }}
Where NULL is default value and true means deep traversal of Request object.
I found a solution like this :
app.request.attributes.get('request').query.get('param_name')
To access to array of query params you can use:
app.request.attributes.get('_route_params');
You can see different solutions on the documentation.

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