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Laravel Eloquent Filter

A simple Laravel, and Lumen package to filter models, and relations

Installation

Laravel

via composer

composer require abdallahmohammed/laravel-eloquent-filter:dev-master

Edit config/app.php (Skip this step if you are using laravel 5.5+)

LaravelEloquentFilter\Providers\LaravelServiceProvider::class,

Copy the package config to your local config

php artisan vendor:publish --provider="LaravelEloquentFilter\Providers\LaravelServiceProvider"

In the config/laravel-eloquent-filter.php config file. Set the namespace your model filters will reside in

'namespace' => "App\\Http\\Filters\\",

Lumen

This is only required if you want to use the php artisan make:filter command.

In bootstrap/app.php

$app->register(LaravelEloquentFilter\Providers\LumenServiceProvider::class);
Change The Default Namespace

In bootstrap/app.php

config(['laravel-eloquent-filter.namespace' => "App\\Http\\Filters\\"]);

Usage

Generating the filter

You can create a model filter with the following artisan command

php artisan make:filter User

Where User is the Eloquent Model name you are creating the filter for. This will create app/Http/Filters/UserFilter.php

The command also supports psr-4 namespacing for creating filters.

Defining filters

After generating the filter for an Eloquent Model you will find something like that in the filters directory

<?php 

namespace App\Http\Filters;

use LaravelEloquentFilter\BaseFilter;

class UserFilter extends BaseFilter
{
    /**
     * Registered filters to operate upon.
     *
     * @var array
     */
    protected $filters = [
        //
    ];
}

As you can see there is an protected property called $filters there you can define all filters for the Model.

For example:

protected $filters = [
    'first_name',
    'email',
];

Bear in mind that all methods filter must be based on camel case

Now after defining filters, let's define the methods that will filter the query

/**
 * @return \Illuminate\Eloquent\Builder
 */
public function firstName($value) {
    return $this->builder->where('first_name', $value);
}

/**
 * @return \Illuminate\Eloquent\Builder
 */
public function name($value) {
    return $this->builder->where('name', 'like', "%$value%");
}

Side note: the empty values are not ignored by default so if you want to filter only for non-empty values you have to check if the value is not empty, or you can simply change it for the package config file

Now let's imagine that you want to show a user called John even if the filter is not exists you have to do something like that.

public function defaultName($value)

This method will be called if the filter called name does not exists

Applying The Filter To A Model

Implement the LaravelEloquentFilter\Filterable trait on any Eloquent Model:

<?php

namespace App;

use LaravelEloquentFilter\Filterable;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;

class User extends Model
{
    use Filterable;

    ...
}

This gives you access to the filter() method that accepts a BaseFilter instance:

namespace App\Http\Controllers;

use App\Models\User;
use App\Http\Filters\UserFilter;

class UserController extends Controller
{
    public function index(UserFilter $filter)
    {
        return User::filter($filter)->get();
    }

    ...
}

Another example:

namespace App\Http\Controllers;

use App\Models\User;
use Illuminate\Http\Request;
use App\Http\Filters\UserFilter;

class UserController extends Controller
{
    public function index(Request $request)
    {
        return User::filter(new UserFilter($request->query()))->get();
    }

    ...
}

Contributing

Any contributions are welcome !!