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Simple pagination library for PHP implements a paging interface on collections of things.

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Simple Pagination

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Many thanks to BrowserStack for supporting open source projects like this one.

Simple pagination library implements a paging interface on collections of things. If you'd like to use the Simple Pagination within a Symfony 2 project then why not try my Simple Pagination Bundle.

Installation

You can install Simple Pagination via Composer. To do that, simply require the package in your composer.json file like so:

{
    "require": {
        "ashleydawson/simple-pagination": "~1.0"
    }
}

Then run composer update to install the package.

How Simple Pagination Works

I've tried to make Simple Pagination as easy to use and as flexible as possible. There are four main elements that describe the operation of Simple Pagination. These are:

  • Paginator service
  • Item total callback
  • Slice callback
  • Pagination model

The Paginator service performs the pagination algorithm, generating the page range and item collection slices. When it's done it will return a Pagination object filled with the item collection slice and metadata.

The two main operations the Paginator service will perform on your collection (or data set) are denoted by two callback methods passed to the Paginator service. The first one is the Item total callback. This callback is used to determine the total number of items in your collection (returned as an integer). The second one is the Slice callback. This callback actually slices your collection given an offset and length argument.

The idea behind using these callbacks is so that Simple Pagination is kept, well, simple! The real power comes with the flexibility. You can use Simple Pagination with just about any collection you want. From simple arrays to database lists to Doctrine collections to Solr result sets - we've got you covered! It really doesn't matter what we paginate - as long as it's a collection of things and you can count and slice it.

Basic Usage

Ok, lets go with the most basic example - paginating over an array.

use AshleyDawson\SimplePagination\Paginator;

// Build a mock list of items we want to paginate through
$items = array(
    'Banana',
    'Apple',
    'Cherry',
    'Lemon',
    'Pear',
    'Watermelon',
    'Orange',
    'Grapefruit',
    'Blackcurrant',
    'Dingleberry',
    'Snosberry',
    'Tomato',
);

// Instantiate a new paginator service
$paginator = new Paginator();

// Set some parameters (optional)
$paginator
    ->setItemsPerPage(10) // Give us a maximum of 10 items per page
    ->setPagesInRange(5) // How many pages to display in navigation (e.g. if we have a lot of pages to get through)
;

// Pass our item total callback
$paginator->setItemTotalCallback(function () use ($items) {
    return count($items);
});

// Pass our slice callback
$paginator->setSliceCallback(function ($offset, $length) use ($items) {
    return array_slice($items, $offset, $length);
});

// Paginate the item collection, passing the current page number (e.g. from the current request)
$pagination = $paginator->paginate((int) $_GET['page']);

// Ok, from here on is where we'd be inside a template of view (e.g. pass $pagination to your view)

// Iterate over the items on this page
foreach ($pagination->getItems() as $item) {
    echo $item . '<br />';
}

// Let's build a basic page navigation structure
foreach ($pagination->getPages() as $page) {
    echo '<a href="?page=' . $page . '">' . $page . '</a> ';
}

There are lots of other pieces of meta data held within the pagination object. These can be used for building first, last previous and next buttons.

MySQL Example

Let's take the example above and use a MySQL result set instead of an array.

use AshleyDawson\SimplePagination\Paginator;

// Instantiate a new paginator service
$paginator = new Paginator();

// Set some parameters (optional)
$paginator
    ->setItemsPerPage(10) // Give us a maximum of 10 items per page
    ->setPagesInRange(5) // How many pages to display in navigation (e.g. if we have a lot of pages to get through)
;

// Pass our item total callback
$paginator->setItemTotalCallback(function () {

    // Run count query
    $result = mysql_query("SELECT COUNT(*) FROM `TestData`");
    
    // Return the count (the value of the first result column), cast as an integer
    return (int) mysql_result($result, 0);
});

// Pass our slice callback
$paginator->setSliceCallback(function ($offset, $length) {
    
    // Run slice query
    $result = mysql_query("SELECT `Name` FROM `TestData` LIMIT {$offset}, {$length}");
    
    // Build a collection of items
    $collection = array();
    while ($row = mysql_fetch_assoc($result)) {
        $collection[] = $row;
    }
    
    // Return the collection
    return $collection;
});

// Paginate the item collection, passing the current page number (e.g. from the current request)
$pagination = $paginator->paginate((int) $_GET['page']);

// Ok, from here on is where we'd be inside a template of view (e.g. pass $pagination to your view)

// Iterate over the items on this page
foreach ($pagination->getItems() as $item) {
    echo $item['Name'] . '<br />';
}

// Let's build a basic page navigation structure
foreach ($pagination->getPages() as $page) {
    echo '<a href="?page=' . $page . '">' . $page . '</a> ';
}

Note: The example above uses mysql_connect() etc. as I tried to make it as simple as possible. In the real world please use PDO, Doctrine DBAL, etc.

It really doesn't matter what sort of collection you return from the Paginator::setSliceCallback() callback. It will always end up in Pagination::getItems().

Constructor Configuration

You can also configure the paginator with a configuration array passed to the constructor. For example:

$paginator = new Paginator(array(
    'itemTotalCallback' => function () {
        // ...
    },
    'sliceCallback' => function ($offset, $length) {
        // ...
    },
    'itemsPerPage' => 10,
    'pagesInRange' => 5
));

Pagination as an Iterator

The Pagination object returned from the Paginator service implements \IteratorAggregate and \Countable so you can do things like this in your view:

if (count($pagination) > 0) {
    foreach ($pagination as $item) {
        echo $item . '<br />';
    }
}

Arbitrary Pagination Metadata

During both item total and slice callbacks you have the option of passing arbitrary metadata to the pagination object. This is an optional feature and is useful if you have a use-case where additional data is returned by these operations and you want to access it from the pagination object whilst listing the items. A good example of this is when using search engines such as ElasticSearch, you can pass back secondary information - like aggregations, etc. A generic example can be seen below:

use AshleyDawson\SimplePagination\Pagination;

// ...

$paginator->setItemTotalCallback(function (Pagination $pagination) use ($items) {
    // Pass arbitrary metadata to pagination object
    $pagination->setMeta(['my', 'meta', 'data']);
    
    return count($items);
});

$paginator->setSliceCallback(function ($offset, $length, Pagination $pagination) use ($items) {
    // Pass more arbitrary metadata to pagination object
    $pagination->setMeta(array_merge($pagination->getMeta(), ['more', 'stuff']));

    return array_slice($items, $offset, $length);
});

// ...

// Perform the pagination
$pagination = $paginator->paginate((int) $_GET['page']);

// Get the metadata from the pagination object
var_dump($pagination->getMeta());

Pre and Post Query Callbacks

Before and after the count and slice queries, you can set callbacks to fire. To set them, do the following:

$paginator->setBeforeQueryCallback(function (Paginator $paginator, Pagination $pagination) {

});

$paginator->setAfterQueryCallback(function (Paginator $paginator, Pagination $pagination) {

});

This is handy if you want to perform some function before and after each query is made.

Pagination Object

The result of the Paginator::paginate() operation is to produce a Pagination model object, which carries the item collection for the current page plus the meta information for the collection, e.g. pages array, next page number, previous page number, etc. Please see below for a list of properties that the Pagination object has.

  • items : mixed (Collection of items for the current page)
  • pages : array (Array of page numbers in the current range)
  • totalNumberOfPages : int (Total number of pages)
  • currentPageNumber : int (Current page number)
  • firstPageNumber : int (First page number)
  • lastPageNumber : int (Last page number)
  • previousPageNumber : int | null (Previous page number)
  • nextPageNumber : int | null (Next page number)
  • itemsPerPage : int (Number of items per page)
  • totalNumberOfItems : int (Total number of items)
  • firstPageNumberInRange : int (First page number in current range)
  • lastPageNumberInRange : int (Last page number in current range)

A good example of using the Pagination object is to build a simple pagination navigation structure:

// Render the first page link
echo '<a href="?page=' . $pagination->getFirstPageNumber() . '">First Page</a> ';

// Render the previous page link (note: the previous page number could be null)
echo '<a href="?page=' . $pagination->getPreviousPageNumber() . '">Previous Page</a> ';

// Render page range links
foreach ($pagination->getPages() as $page) {
    echo '<a href="?page=' . $page . '">' . $page . '</a> ';
}

// Render the next page link (note: the next page number could be null)
echo '<a href="?page=' . $pagination->getNextPageNumber() . '">Next Page</a> ';

// Render the last page link
echo '<a href="?page=' . $pagination->getLastPageNumber() . '">Last Page</a>';

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