Can you tell me how to use a controller for home page because i'm trying to put a model's data in home.ctp (homepage view) with
<?php $this->user->find() ?>but it returns
Notice (8): Undefined property:
View::$user [APP\views\pages\home.ctp,
line 1]
You should check out the cookbook; it has some solid CakePHP tutorials, at http://book.cakephp.org/
You haven't really provided alot of information, but my guess is your Controller uses a model 'User', and you're putting $this->user->find() in your view, when it should be in your controller. In your controller's action you'll want/need to do something like this...
Users_Controller extends AppController {
function index() {
$arrayOfUsers = $this->User->find(...);
$this->set('users', $arrayOfUsers);
}
}
You can then - in your View - access 'users' like so:
pre($users);
... since you used the Controller method set() to send a variable $users to the view.
All you really need to do is create a new controller if that's the direction you want to go. If this is the only statement you have that requires data access, it might be worth faking it in only this method of the PagesController. For example, one of my projects' homepages is 99% static save for a list of featured events. Rather than move everything out to a new controller or even loading my Event model for the entire PagesController (where it's not needed), I just applied this solution in PagesController::home():
$attractions = ClassRegistry::init ( 'Attraction' )->featured ( 10 );
Works great. If your page is more dynamic than mine, though, it may well be worth routing your homepage through a different controller (one that is more closely related to the data being displayed).
The default controller for the home page i.e home.ctp view, is located in /cake/libs/controller/pages_controller.php. This controller can be overriden by placing a copy in the controllers directory of your application as /app/controllers/pages_controller.php. You can then modify that controller as deem fit i.e. use models, inject variables to be used in the home page etc
Related
I have 5 controllers and 5 models and they are all related to backend. I can easily output data in the backend but I need to that for the frontend as well. Not all of course but some of them.
For example I have controller called BooksController:
public function getBooks(Request $request)
{
$books = Books::all();
return view('backend.books.show', compact('images'));
}
So this will show it in backend without any problems but what I want is for example to loop through all the books and show their images in welcome.blade.php which doesn't have controller.
And also to pass other parameters to that same view from different controllers.
Is this is possible?
Thank you.
You are having an error because you did not declare the variable $image
public function getBooks(Request $request)
{
$books = Books::all();
$images = array_map(function($book) {
$book->image;
}, $books);
return view('backend.books.show', compact('images'));
}
It sounds like you are potentially caught up on some terminology. In this case, it sounds like backend is referring to your admin-facing interface, and frontend is referring to your user-facing interface.
You also seem to be locked on the idea of controllers. Unless the route is verrrrrry basic, create a controller for it.
Have a controller for your welcome view, for your admin view, basically (with some exceptions) a controller per resource or view is fine.
In this case, you would have one controller for your admin book view, and a seperate controller for your welcome view. Both of which would pull the books out of the db and render them in their own way
I am building a cms in codeigniter and i want to remove controller name and function name form the url and just print the alias.
I will be having two controllers one for static pages and other for blog posts with categories.
Please help, Suggestions reagrding modification of two controllers are also welcome.
You will need to override the default 404 controller in application/config/routes.php.
$route['404_override'] = 'content';
Any request that can't be mapped to a controller will be passed to the application/controllers/content.php controller
Your Content controller, or whatever you decide to call it, will parse the uri [$this->uri->segment(1)] and check for a matching reference in your CMS database.
If there is no match in the database, then you can look for a static view in the views folder and load it.
if(is_file(FCPATH.'views/'.$this->uri->segment(1).'.php')) {
$this->load->view($controller,$this->data);
}
If no static view is found, and there is no matching content in the db, call the show_404() function.
Using this method, you will keep the default CI functionality of uri mapping, so at any time, you can add controllers as you normally would and the app will perform like a vanilla CI install.
I'm creating a simple blog with Codeigniter. But I'm having trouble calling another controller besides the default controller.
The following URL takes me to the default controller as specified in my config/routes.php.
blog/index.php
According to the documentation, simply appending the name of another controller saved in controllers/ is all that is needed:
blog/index.php/blog_login
Here is my controller class, named blog_login.php:
class Blog_login extends CI_Controller {
public function index()
{
echo 'It works!';
}
}
But doing this throws a 404 error, which makes me feel that I'm missing something. Is there something else that I am supposed to configure before trying to access a different controller?
http://codeigniter.com/user_guide/general/routing.html Read this properly, it couldn't be clearer.
According to the documentation, simply appending the name of another
controller saved in controllers/ is all that is needed
This is not true. If you want to call another controller 'Blog_login', you simply put the name of the controller as the first segment of the url:
domain.com/index.php/blog_login
This will never work:
blog/index.php/blog_login
Index.php (unless you remove it via .htaccess) always follows right after your domain.com
Finally, you don't need to specify routes unless you're doing something non standard. So
domain.com/index.php/blog_login - calls the index() function in your Blog_login controller
domain.com/index.php/blog - calls the index() function in your blog controller
domain.com/index.php/blog/search - calls the search() function in your blog controller.
None of the above examples need an entry in routes.php
When u call:
blog/index.php/blog_login
you're really calling a method called "blog_login" in your "blog" controller. If you want to call another controller, it must have the following structure:
controller_name/controller_method
So, if you wanna call your blog_login controller just call it like this:
blog_login/
Note: Sometimes it's necessary to add the base_url() to your URL in order to make CI understand correctly the URL.
I've just discovered HMVC Modular Extension for CodeIgniter https://bitbucket.org/wiredesignz/codeigniter-modular-extensions-hmvc/wiki/Home and it seems perfect for my needs but I have some question.
Let's say I have two controllers:
Site which is the main controller and is used to show site's pages and may call methods of Users controller for example to show a form
User controller is used to authenticate users, to show login/sign up forms...
Now I have these questions:
If the user access the User controller directly (mysite.com/user/method) I want to show a full page while if i load a method of User from within the Site controller I want to show only a form (for example), is this possible?
What happens to view of a module loaded from another module: is the view shown automatically or i need to show it manually and how does the view behave?
If you method is being called via Modules::run()
There is a third optional parameter lets you change the behavior of
the function so that it returns data as a string rather than sending
it to your browser.
Eg:
//put underscore in front to prevent uri access to this method.
public function _module1()
{
$this->load->view('partial_view', array('some data'=>'some data'), TRUE)
}
call it inside your SITE view easily
Modules::run('User/_module1')
// should show whatever is in partial_view ie: a form
//an alternative is to pass in any params if the method requires them
Modules::run('User/_module1', $param)
I have a site that has a lot of pages that lye at the root (ex. /contact, /about, /home, /faq, /privacy, /tos, etc.). My question is should these all be separate controllers or one controller with many methods (ex. contact, about, index within a main.php controller )?
UPDATE:
I just realized that methods that are within the default controller don't show in the url without the default controller (ie. main/contact wont automatically route to /contact if main is the default controller ). So you would need to go into routes and override each page.
If all of these are just pages, I would recommend putting them into a single controller. I usually end up putting static pages like this into a 'pages' controller and putting in routes for each static page to bypass the '/pages' in my URLs.
If they are share the same functionality, so they should be in the same controller.
for example, if all of them are using the same model to take content from, so, one controller can easily handle it.
Why in one controller? because you always want to reuse your code.
class someController{
function cotact(){
print $this->getContentFromModel(1);
}
function about(){
print $this->getContentFromModel(2);
}
function home(){
print $this->getContentFromModel(3);
}
private function getContentFromModel($id){
return $this->someContentModel->getContentById($id);
}
}
(instead of print, you should use load a view)
See in my example how all of the function are using the same getContentFromModel function to share the same functionality.
but this is one case only, there could be ther cases that my example can be bad for...
in application/config/routes.php
$route['contact'] = "mainController/contact";
$route['about'] = "mainController/about";
$route['home'] = "mainController/home";
$route['faq'] = "mainController/faq";
$route['privacy'] = "mainController/privacy";
and you should add all of these methods within the mainController.php
You can also save the content of the pages in your database, and them query it. For instance, you can send the url as the keyword to identify the page content
$route['contact'] = "mainController/getContent/contact";
$route['about'] = "mainController/getContent/about";
$route['home'] = "mainController/getContent/home";
$route['faq'] = "mainController/getContent/faq";
$route['privacy'] = "mainController/getContent/privacy";
in this case you only have to create one method named "getContent" in the controller "mainController" and this method will look something like this:
class mainController extends CI_Controller
{
public function getContent($param)
{
$query = $this->db->get_where('mytable', array('pageName' => $param));
// then get the result and print it in a view
}
}
Hope this works for you
The page names you listed should probably be different methods inside your main controller. When you have other functionality that is related to another specific entity, like user, you can create another controller for the user entity and have different methods to display the user, update the user, register the user. But its all really a tool for you to organize your application in a way that makes sense for your domain and your domain model.
I've written a blog post about organizing CodeIgniter controller methods that might be helpful to you. Check it out here: http://caseyflynn.com/2011/10/26/codeigniter-php-framework-how-to-organize-controllers-to-achieve-dry-principles/