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Last Updated: 2023-09-15 09:51:44
👀 Manage your views in Laravel projects through artisan
License: MIT License
Languages: PHP
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This package has been abandoned. The make:view
command is a part of Laravel
since v10.23.0, you
should use that instead. You will still be able to install this package when using
Laravel versions before v10.23.0
.
This package adds a handful of view-related commands to Artisan in your Laravel project. Generate blade files that extend other views, scaffold out sections to add to those templates, and more. All from the command line we know and love!
You'll have to follow a couple of simple steps to install this package.
Via composer:
composer require sven/artisan-view --dev
If you're using Laravel 5.5 or above, you can skip this step. The service provider will have already been registered thanks to auto-discovery.
Otherwise, register Sven\ArtisanView\ServiceProvider::class
manually in your AppServiceProvider
's
register
method:
public function register()
{
if ($this->app->environment() !== 'production') {
$this->app->register(\Sven\ArtisanView\ServiceProvider::class);
}
}
If you now run php artisan
you will see two new commands in the list:
make:view
scrap:view
# Create a view 'index.blade.php' in the default directory
$ php artisan make:view index
# Create a view 'index.blade.php' in a subdirectory ('pages')
$ php artisan make:view pages.index
# Create a view with a different file extension ('index.html')
$ php artisan make:view index --extension=html
# Extend an existing view
$ php artisan make:view index --extends=app
# Add a section to the view
$ php artisan make:view index --section=content
# Add multiple sections to the view
$ php artisan make:view index --section=title --section=content
# Add an inline section to the view
# Remember to add quotes around the section if you want to use spaces
$ php artisan make:view index --section="title:Hello world"
# Create sections for each @yield statement in the extended view
$ php artisan make:view index --extends=app --with-yields
# Add @push directives for each @stack statement in the extended view
$ php artisan make:view index --extends=app --with-stacks
# Create a resource called 'products'
$ php artisan make:view products --resource
# Create a resource with only specific verbs
$ php artisan make:view products --resource --verb=index --verb=create --verb=edit
# Remove the view 'index.blade.php'
$ php artisan scrap:view index
# Remove the view by dot notation
$ php artisan scrap:view pages.index
This will ask you if you're sure. To skip this question, pass the --force
flag:
# Don't ask for confirmation
$ php artisan scrap:view index --force
# Remove the resource called 'products'
$ php artisan scrap:view products --resource
This will remove the views products.index
, products.show
, products.create
, and products.edit
. If the directory
products/
is empty after doing that, it will also be deleted.
You can scrap part of a resource by adding --verb
flags:
# Remove the 'products.create' and 'products.edit' views.
$ php artisan scrap:view products --resource --verb=create --verb=edit
Of course, all the options work well together like you'd expect. So the following command...
$ php artisan make:view products --resource --extends=app --section="title:This is my title" --section=content
... will put the following contents in products/index.blade.php
, products/edit.blade.php
, products/create.blade.php
,
and products/show.blade.php
:
@extends('app')
@section('title', 'This is my title')
@section('content')
@endsection
All contributions (in the form on pull requests, issues and feature-requests) are welcome. See the contributors page for all contributors.
sven/artisan-view
is licenced under the MIT License (MIT). Please see the
license file for more information.