Transparently use Bootstrap 5 with CakePHP 5.
For version info see version map.
- CakePHP 5.x
- Bootstrap 5.3.x
- npm 6.x
- Bootstrap Icons 1.11.x
- FlashHelper (element types:
error
,info
,success
,warning
) - FormHelper (align:
default
,inline
,horizontal
) - BreadcrumbsHelper
- HtmlHelper (components:
badge
,icon
) - PaginatorHelper
- Widgets (
basic
,button
,datetime
,file
,select
,textarea
) - Example layouts (
cover
,signin
,dashboard
) - Bake templates
cd
to the root of your app folder (where the composer.json
file is) and run the following Composer
command:
composer require friendsofcake/bootstrap-ui
Then load the plugin using CakePHP's console:
bin/cake plugin load BootstrapUI
You can either use the Bootstrap commands to make the necessary changes, or do them manually.
-
To install the Bootstrap assets (Bootstrap's CSS/JS files) via npm you can use the
install
command, or install them manually:bin/cake bootstrap install
This will fetch all assets, copy the distribution assets to the BootstrapUI plugin's webroot directory, and symlink (or copy) them to your application's
webroot
directory.If you want to install the latest minor versions of the assets instead of the exact pinned ones, you can use the
--latest
option:bin/cake bootstrap install --latest
-
You will need to modify your
src/View/AppView
class to either extendBootstrapUI\View\UIView
or use the traitBootStrapUI\View\UIViewTrait
. For doing this you can either use themodify_view
command, or change your view manually:bin/cake bootstrap modify_view
This will rewrite your
src/View/AppView
like described in AppView setup using UIView. -
BootstrapUI ships with some example layouts. You can install them using the
copy_layouts
command, or copy them manually:bin/cake bootstrap copy_layouts
This will copy the three example layouts
cover.php
,dashboard.php
andsignin.php
to your application'ssrc/templates/layout/TwitterBootstrap
.
The the install
command installs the Bootstrap assets via npm, which you can also
do manually if you wish to control which assets are being included, and where they are placed.
Assuming you are in your application's root:
npm install bootstrap@5 bootstrap-icons@1
mkdir -p webroot/css
mkdir -p webroot/font/fonts
mkdir -p webroot/js
cp node_modules/bootstrap/dist/css/bootstrap.css webroot/css/
cp node_modules/bootstrap/dist/css/bootstrap.min.css webroot/css/
cp node_modules/bootstrap/dist/js/bootstrap.bundle.js webroot/js/
cp node_modules/bootstrap/dist/js/bootstrap.bundle.min.js webroot/js/
cp node_modules/bootstrap-icons/font/bootstrap-icons.css webroot/font/
cp node_modules/bootstrap-icons/font/fonts/bootstrap-icons.woff webroot/font/fonts/
cp node_modules/bootstrap-icons/font/fonts/bootstrap-icons.woff2 webroot/font/fonts/
cp vendor/friendsofcake/bootstrap-ui/webroot/font/bootstrap-icon-sizes.css webroot/font/
For a quick setup, just make your AppView
class extend BootstrapUI\View\UIView
. The base class will handle
the initializing and loading of the BootstrapUI default.php
layout for your app.
The src\View\AppView.php
will look something like the following:
declare(strict_types=1);
namespace App\View;
use BootstrapUI\View\UIView;
class AppView extends UIView
{
/**
* Initialization hook method.
*/
public function initialize(): void
{
// Don't forget to call parent::initialize()
parent::initialize();
}
}
If you're adding BootstrapUI to an existing application, it might be easier to use the trait, as it gives you more control over the loading of the layout.
declare(strict_types=1);
namespace App\View;
use BootstrapUI\View\UIViewTrait;
use Cake\View\View;
class AppView extends View
{
use UIViewTrait;
/**
* Initialization hook method.
*/
public function initialize(): void
{
parent::initialize();
// Call the initializeUI method from UIViewTrait
$this->initializeUI();
}
}
In order to be able to use the BootstrapUI example layouts (directly taken from the Bootstrap examples), they need to be
copied to your application's layouts directory, either by using
the copy_layouts
command, or by copying the files manually:
cp -R vendor/friendsofcake/bootstrap-ui/templates/layout/examples templates/layout/TwitterBootstrap
BootstrapUI comes with its own default.php
layout file and examples taken from the Bootstrap framework.
When no layout for the view is defined, the BootstrapUI\View\UIViewTrait
will load its own default.php
layout file.
You can override this behavior in two ways.
- Assign a layout to the template with
$this->setLayout('layout')
. - Disable auto loading of the layout in
BootstrapUI\View\UIViewTrait
by adding$this->initializeUI(['layout' => false]);
to yourAppView
'sinitialize()
function.
Once copied into your application's layouts directory (being it via
the copy_layouts
command or manually), you can simply
extend the example layouts in your views like so:
$this->extend('../layout/TwitterBootstrap/dashboard');
Available types are:
cover
signin
dashboard
NOTE: Remember to set the stylesheets in the layouts you copy.
If you are using the BoostrapUI plugin's default layout, and you have installed the Bootstrap
assets using the install
command, the required assets should automatically be
included.
If you wish to use your own layout template, then you need to take care of including the required CSS/JS files yourself.
If you have installed the assets using the install
command, you can refer to
them using the standard plugin syntax:
// in the <head>
echo $this->Html->css('BootstrapUI.bootstrap.min');
echo $this->Html->css(['BootstrapUI./font/bootstrap-icons', 'BootstrapUI./font/bootstrap-icon-sizes']);
echo $this->Html->script(['BootstrapUI.bootstrap.bundle.min']);
If you have installed the assets manually, you'll need to use paths accordingly. With the example copy commands you could use the standard short path syntax:
echo $this->Html->css('bootstrap.min');
echo $this->Html->css(['/font/bootstrap-icons', '/font/bootstrap-icon-sizes']);
echo $this->Html->script(['bootstrap.bundle.min']);
If you're using paths that don't adhere to the CakePHP conventions, you'll have to explicitly specify them:
echo $this->Html->css('/path/to/bootstrap.css');
echo $this->Html->css(['/path/to/bootstrap-icons.css', '/path/to/bootstrap-icon-sizes.css']);
echo $this->Html->script(['/path/to/bootstrap.bundle.js']);
For those of you who want even more automation, some bake templates have been included. Use them like so:
bin/cake bake [subcommand] -t BootstrapUI
Currently, bake templates for the following bake subcommands are included:
Additionally to the default index
, add
, edit
, and view
templates, a login
template is available too. While
the default CRUD action view templates can be utilized like this:
bin/cake bake template ControllerName -t BootstrapUI
the login
template has to be used explicitly by specifying the action name:
bin/cake bake template ControllerName login -t BootstrapUI
At the core of BootstrapUI is a collection of enhancements for CakePHP core helpers. Among other things, these helpers replace the HTML templates used to render elements for the views. This allows you to create forms and components that use the Bootstrap styles.
The current list of enhanced helpers are:
BootstrapUI\View\Helper\FlashHelper
BootstrapUI\View\Helper\FormHelper
BootstrapUI\View\Helper\HtmlHelper
BootstrapUI\View\Helper\PaginatorHelper
BootstrapUI\View\Helper\BreadcrumbsHelper
When the BootstrapUI\View\UIViewTrait
is initialized it loads the above helpers with the same aliases as the
CakePHP core helpers. That means that when you use $this->Form->create()
in your views, the helper being used
is from the BootstrapUI plugin.
echo $this->Form->create($article);
echo $this->Form->control('title');
echo $this->Form->control('published', ['type' => 'checkbox']);
echo $this->Form->button('Submit');
echo $this->Form->end();
will render this HTML:
<form method="post" accept-charset="utf-8" action="/articles/add">
<!-- ... -->
<div class="mb-3 text">
<label class="form-label" for="title">Title</label>
<input type="text" name="title" id="title" class="form-control">
</div>
<div class="mb-3 form-check checkbox">
<input type="hidden" name="published" value="0">
<input type="checkbox" class="form-check-input" name="published" value="1" id="published">
<label class="form-check-label" for="published">Published</label>
</div>
<button type="submit" class="btn btn-secondary">Submit</button>
<!-- ... -->
</form>
Horizontal forms automatically render labels and controls in separate columns (where applicable), labels in th first one, and controls in the second one.
Alignment can be configured via the align
option, which takes either a list of column sizes for the md
Bootstrap screen-size/breakpoint, or a matrix of
screen-size/breakpoint names and column sizes.
The following will use the default md
screen-size/breakpoint:
use BootstrapUI\View\Helper\FormHelper;
echo $this->Form->create($article, [
'align' => [
FormHelper::GRID_COLUMN_ONE => 4, // first column (span over 4 columns)
FormHelper::GRID_COLUMN_TWO => 8, // second column (span over 8 columns)
],
]);
echo $this->Form->control('title');
echo $this->Form->control('published', ['type' => 'checkbox']);
echo $this->Form->submit();
echo $this->Form->end();
It will render this HTML:
<form method="post" accept-charset="utf-8" class="form-horizontal" action="/articles/add">
<!-- ... -->
<div class="mb-3 row text">
<label class="col-form-label col-md-4" for="title">Title</label>
<div class="col-md-8">
<input type="text" name="title" id="title" class="form-control">
</div>
</div>
<div class="mb-3 row checkbox">
<div class="offset-md-4 col-md-8">
<div class="form-check">
<input type="hidden" name="published" value="0"/>
<input type="checkbox" name="published" value="1" id="published" class="form-check-input"/>
<label class="form-check-label" for="published">Published</label>
</div>
</div>
</div>
<!-- ... -->
<button type="submit" class="btn btn-secondary">Submit</button>
</form>
The following uses a matrix of screen-sizes/breakpoints and column sizes:
use BootstrapUI\View\Helper\FormHelper;
echo $this->Form->create($article, [
'align' => [
// column sizes for the `sm` screen-size/breakpoint
'sm' => [
FormHelper::GRID_COLUMN_ONE => 6,
FormHelper::GRID_COLUMN_TWO => 6,
],
// column sizes for the `md` screen-size/breakpoint
'md' => [
FormHelper::GRID_COLUMN_ONE => 4,
FormHelper::GRID_COLUMN_TWO => 8,
],
],
]);
echo $this->Form->control('title');
echo $this->Form->control('published', ['type' => 'checkbox']);
echo $this->Form->button('Submit');
echo $this->Form->end();
It will render this HTML:
<form method="post" accept-charset="utf-8" action="/articles/add">
<!-- ... -->
<div class="mb-3 row text">
<label class="col-form-label col-sm-6 col-md-4" for="title">Title</label>
<div class="col-sm-6 col-md-8">
<input type="text" name="title" id="title" class="form-control">
</div>
</div>
<div class="mb-3 row checkbox">
<div class="offset-sm-6 offset-md-4 col-sm-6 col-md-8">
<div class="form-check">
<input type="hidden" name="published" value="0"/>
<input type="checkbox" name="published" value="1" id="published" class="form-check-input"/>
<label class="form-check-label" for="published">Published</label>
</div>
</div>
</div>
<!-- ... -->
<button type="submit" class="btn btn-secondary">Submit</button>
</form>
The default alignment will use the md
screen-size/breakpoint and the following column sizes:
[
FormHelper::GRID_COLUMN_ONE => 2,
FormHelper::GRID_COLUMN_TWO => 10,
]
Inline forms will render controls on one and the same row, and hide labels for most controls.
echo $this->Form->create($article, [
'align' => 'inline',
]);
echo $this->Form->control('title', ['placeholder' => 'Title']);
echo $this->Form->control('published', ['type' => 'checkbox']);
echo $this->Html->div('col-auto', $this->Form->button('Submit'));
echo $this->Form->end();
will render this HTML:
<form method="post" accept-charset="utf-8" action="/articles/add">
<!-- ... -->
<div class="col-auto">
<div class="text">
<label class="form-label visually-hidden" for="title">Title</label>
<input type="text" name="title" placeholder="Title" id="title" class="form-control"/>
</div>
</div>
<div class="col-auto">
<div class="form-check checkbox">
<input type="hidden" name="published" value="0"/>
<input type="checkbox" name="published" value="1" id="published" class="form-check-input">
<label class="form-check-label" for="published">Published</label>
</div>
</div>
<!-- ... -->
<div class="col-auto">
<button type="submit" class="btn btn-secondary">Submit</button>
</div>
</form>
Out of the box BootstrapUI applies some default spacing for form controls. For default and horizontal aligned forms,
the mb-3
spacing class is being applied to all controls,
while inline forms are using the g-3
gutter class.
This can be changed using the spacing
option, it applies on a per-helper and per-form basis for all alignments, and
for default/horizontal alignments it also applies on a per-control basis.
// for all forms
echo $this->Form->setConfig([
'spacing' => 'mb-6',
]);
// for a specific form
echo $this->Form->create($entity, [
'spacing' => 'mb-6',
]);
// for a specific control (default/horizontal aligned forms only)
echo $this->Form->control('title', [
'spacing' => 'mb-6',
]);
To completely disable this behavior, set the spacing
option to false
.
BootstrapUI supports and generates Bootstrap compatible markup for all of CakePHP's default controls. Additionally it explicitly supports Bootstrap specific markup for the following controls:
color
range
switch
Attributes of the outer control container can be changed via the container
option, cutting the need to use custom
templates for simple changes. The class
attribute is a special case, its value will be prepended to the existing
list of classes instead of replacing it.
echo $this->Form->control('title', [
'container' => [
'class' => 'my-title-control',
'data-meta' => 'meta information',
],
]);
This would generate the following HTML:
<div data-meta="meta information" class="my-title-control mb-3 text">
<label class="form-label" for="title">Title</label>
<input type="text" name="title" id="title" class="form-control">
</div>
Appending/Prepending content to input groups is supported via the append
and prepend
options respectively.
echo $this->Form->control('email', [
'prepend' => '@',
]);
This would generate the following HTML:
<div class="mb-3 email">
<label class="form-label" for="email">Email</label>
<div class="input-group">
<span class="input-group-text">@</span>
<input type="email" name="email" id="email" class="form-control"/>
</div>
</div>
Multiple addons can be defined as an array for the append
and prepend
options:
echo $this->Form->control('amount', [
'prepend' => ['$', '0.00'],
]);
This would generate the following HTML:
<div class="mb-3 text">
<label class="form-label" for="amount">Amount</label>
<div class="input-group">
<span class="input-group-text">$</span>
<span class="input-group-text">0.00</span>
<input type="text" name="amount" id="amount" class="form-control"/>
</div>
</div>
Addons support options that apply to the input group container. They can be defined by passing an array for the append
and prepend
options, and adding an array with options as the last entry.
Options can contain HTML attributes as know from control options, as well as the special size
option, which
automatically translates to the corresponding input group size class.
echo $this->Form->control('amount', [
'prepend' => [
'$',
'0.00',
[
'size' => 'lg',
'class' => 'custom',
'custom' => 'attribute',
],
],
]);
This would generate the following HTML:
<div class="mb-3 text">
<label class="form-label" for="amount">Amount</label>
<div class="input-group input-group-lg custom" custom="attribute">
<span class="input-group-text">$</span>
<span class="input-group-text">0.00</span>
<input type="text" name="amount" id="amount" class="form-control"/>
</div>
</div>
Inline checkboxes/switches and radio buttons (not to be
confused with inline aligned forms), can be created by setting the inline
option to true
.
Inlined checkboxes/switches and radio buttons will be rendered on the same horizontal row. When using horizontal form alignment however, only multi-checkboxes will render on the same row!
echo $this->Form->control('option_1', [
'type' => 'checkbox',
'inline' => true,
]);
echo $this->Form->control('option_2', [
'type' => 'checkbox',
'inline' => true,
]);
This would generate the following HTML:
<div class="mb-3 form-check form-check-inline checkbox">
<input type="hidden" name="option-1" value="0"/>
<input type="checkbox" name="option-1" value="1" id="option-1" class="form-check-input">
<label class="form-check-label" for="option-1">Option 1</label>
</div>
<div class="mb-3 form-check form-check-inline checkbox">
<input type="hidden" name="option-2" value="0"/>
<input type="checkbox" name="option-2" value="2" id="option-2" class="form-check-input">
<label class="form-check-label" for="option-2">Option 2</label>
</div>
Switch style checkboxes can be created by setting the
switch
option to true
.
echo $this->Form->control('option', [
'type' => 'checkbox',
'switch' => true,
]);
This would generate the following HTML:
<div class="mb-3 form-check form-switch checkbox">
<input type="hidden" name="option" value="0"/>
<input type="checkbox" name="option" value="1" id="option" class="form-check-input">
<label class="form-check-label" for="option">Option</label>
</div>
Floating labels are supported for text
, textarea
, and
(non-multiple
) select
controls. They can be enabled via the label's floating
option:
echo $this->Form->control('title', [
'label' => [
'floating' => true,
],
]);
This would generate the following HTML:
<div class="mb-3 form-floating text">
<input type="text" name="title" id="title" class="form-control"/>
<label for="title">Title</label>
</div>
Bootstrap's form help text is supported via the
help
option.
The help text is by default being rendered in between of the control and the validation feedback.
echo $this->Form->control('title', [
'help' => 'Help text',
]);
This would generate the following HTML:
<div class="mb-3 text">
<label class="form-label" for="title">Title</label>
<input type="text" name="title" id="title" class="form-control" aria-describedby="title-help"/>
<small id="title-help" class="d-block form-text text-muted">Help text</small>
</div>
Attributes can be configured by passing an array for the help
option, where the text is then defined in the content
key:
echo $this->Form->control('title', [
'help' => [
'id' => 'custom-help',
'class' => 'custom',
'data-custom' => 'attribute',
'content' => 'Help text',
],
]);
This would generate the following HTML:
<div class="mb-3 text">
<label class="form-label" for="title">Title</label>
<input type="text" name="title" id="title" class="form-control" aria-describedby="custom-help"/>
<small id="custom-help" class="custom d-block form-text text-muted" data-custom="attribute">Help text</small>
</div>
Bootstrap tooltips can be added to labels via the tooltip
option. The tooltip toggles are by default being rendered as a Bootstrap icon, which
is being included by default when installing the assets via the install
command.
echo $this->Form->control('title', [
'tooltip' => 'Tooltip text',
]);
This would generate the following HTML:
<div class="mb-3 text">
<label class="form-label" for="title">
Title <span data-bs-toggle="tooltip" title="Tooltip text" class="bi bi-info-circle-fill"></span>
</label>
<input type="text" name="title" id="title" class="form-control"/>
</div>
If you want to use a different toggle, being it a different Boostrap icon, or maybe a completely different icon
font/library, then you can do this by
overriding the tooltip
template
accordingly, being it globally, per form, or per control:
echo $this->Form->control('title', [
'tooltip' => 'Tooltip text',
'templates' => [
'tooltip' => '<span data-bs-toggle="tooltip" title="{{content}}" class="material-icons">info</span>',
],
]);
BootstrapUI supports two styles of error feedback, the
regular Bootstrap text feedback, and
Bootstrap tooltip feedback (not to be confused with
label tooltips that are configured via the tooltip
option!).
The style can be configured via the feedbackStyle
option, either globally, per form, or per control. The supported
styles are:
\BootstrapUI\View\Helper\FormHelper::FEEDBACK_STYLE_DEFAULT
Render error feedback as regular Bootstrap text feedback.\BootstrapUI\View\Helper\FormHelper::FEEDBACK_STYLE_TOOLTIP
Render error feedback as Bootstrap tooltip feedback (inline forms are using this style by default).
Note that using the tooltip error style requires the form group elements to be non-static positioned! The form helper
will automatically add Bootstraps position utility class
position-relative
to the form group elements when the tooltip error style is enabled.
If you need different positioning, use either CSS to override the position
rule on the .form-group
elements, or use
the formGroupPosition
option to set your desired position, either globally, per form, or per control. The option
supports the following values:
\BootstrapUI\View\Helper\FormHelper::POSITION_ABSOLUTE
\BootstrapUI\View\Helper\FormHelper::POSITION_FIXED
\BootstrapUI\View\Helper\FormHelper::POSITION_RELATIVE
\BootstrapUI\View\Helper\FormHelper::POSITION_STATIC
\BootstrapUI\View\Helper\FormHelper::POSITION_STICKY
$this->Form->setConfig([
'feedbackStyle' => \BootstrapUI\View\Helper\FormHelper::FEEDBACK_STYLE_TOOLTIP,
'formGroupPosition' => \BootstrapUI\View\Helper\FormHelper::POSITION_ABSOLUTE,
]);
// ...
echo $this->Form->control('title');
With an error on the title
field, this would generate the following HTML:
<div class="mb-3 position-absolute text is-invalid">
<label class="form-label" for="title">Title</label>
<input type="text" name="title" id="title" class="is-invalid form-control"/>
<div class="invalid-tooltip">Error message</div>
</div>
You can set Flash Messages using the default Flash component syntax. Supported types are success
, info
, warning
,
error
.
$this->Flash->success('Your Success Message.');
If you need to set other Bootstrap Alert styles you can do this with:
$this->Flash->set('Your Dark Message.', ['params' => ['class' => 'dark']]);
Supported styles are primary
, secondary
, light
, dark
.
By default alerts use Bootstrap icons depending on the alert type. The mapped types are default
, info
, warning
,
error
, and success
. You can disable/customize icons via the icon
option/parameter, either globally for the flash
helper, or individually for a single message.
Message without icon:
$this->Flash->success('Message without icon.', [
'params' => [
'icon' => false,
],
]);
Use a custom icon:
$this->Flash->success('Message with custom icon.', [
'params' => [
'icon' => 'mic-mute-fill',
],
]);
Pass icon options (the icon name is optional here, when omitted, the default icon map will be looked up):
$this->Flash->success('Message with custom icon options.', [
'params' => [
'icon' => [
'name' => 'mic-mute-fill',
'size' => '2xl',
'class' => 'foo bar me-2',
'data-custom' => 'attribute',
],
],
]);
<i class="foo bar me-2 bi bi-mic-mute-fill bi-2xl" data-custom="attribute"></i>
Use custom HTML:
$this->Flash->success('Message with custom icon HTML.', [
'params' => [
'icon' => '<span class="material-icons">volume_off</span>',
],
]);
Disable icons for all flash messages:
$this->loadHelper('Flash', [
'className' => 'BootstrapUI.Flash',
'icon' => false,
]);
Set icon options for all flash messages (the default icon map will be used, and the options will be applied to all icons):
$this->loadHelper('Flash', [
'className' => 'BootstrapUI.Flash',
'icon' => [
'size' => '2xl',
'class' => 'foo bar me-2',
'data-custom' => 'attribute',
],
]);
Define a custom icon map:
$this->loadHelper('Flash', [
'className' => 'BootstrapUI.Flash',
'iconMap' => [
'default' => 'info-circle-fill',
'success' => 'check-circle-fill',
'error' => 'exclamation-triangle-fill',
'info' => 'info-circle-fill',
'warning' => 'exclamation-triangle-fill',
],
]);
Use a different icon set:
$this->Flash->success('Message with different icon set.', [
'params' => [
'icon' => [
'namespace' => 'fas',
'prefix' => 'fa',
'name' => 'microphone-slash',
'size' => '2xl',
],
],
]);
<i class="me-2 fas fa-microphone-slash fa-2xl"></i>
Use a different icon set for all flash messages:
$this->loadHelper('Html', [
'className' => 'BootstrapUI.Html',
'iconDefaults' => [
'namespace' => 'fas',
'prefix' => 'fa',
],
]);
$this->loadHelper('Flash', [
'className' => 'BootstrapUI.Flash',
'iconMap' => [
'default' => 'info-circle',
'success' => 'check-circle',
'error' => 'exclamation-triangle',
'info' => 'info-circle',
'warning' => 'exclamation-triangle',
],
]);
By default badges will render as secondary
theme styled:
echo $this->Html->badge('Text');
<span class="badge bg-secondary">Text</span>
Background colors can be changed by specifying
one of the Bootstrap theme color names via the class
option, the helper will make sure that the correct prefixes
are being applied:
echo $this->Html->badge('Text', [
'class' => 'danger',
]);
<span class="badge bg-danger">Text</span>
By default badges are using the <span>
tag. This can be changed via the tag
option:
echo $this->Html->badge('Text', [
'tag' => 'div',
]);
<div class="badge bg-secondary">Text</div>
By default the HTML helper is configured to use Bootstrap icons.
echo $this->Html->icon('mic-mute-fill');
<i class="bi bi-mic-mute-fill"></i>
Sizes can be specified via the size
option, the passed value will automatically be prefixed:
echo $this->Html->icon('mic-mute-fill', [
'size' => '2xl',
]);
<i class="bi bi-mic-mute-fill bi-2xl"></i>
This plugin ships Bootstrap icon classes for the following sizes that center-align the icon vertically: 2xs
, xs
,
sm
, lg
, xl
, and 2xl
, and the following ones that align the icons on the baseline: 1x
, 2x
, 3x
, 4x
, 5x
,
6x
, 7x
, 8x
, 9x
, and 10x
.
You can use a different icon set by configuring the namespace
and prefix
options, either per icon()
call:
echo $this->Html->icon('microphone-slash', [
'namespace' => 'fas',
'prefix' => 'fa',
]);
or globally for all usages of HtmlHelper::icon()
by configuring the HTML helper defaults:
$this->loadHelper('Html', [
'className' => 'BootstrapUI.Html',
'iconDefaults' => [
'namespace' => 'fas',
'prefix' => 'fa',
],
]);
The breadcrumbs helper is a drop-in replacement, no additional configuration is available/required.
echo $this->Breadcrumbs
->add('Home', '/')
->add('Articles', '/articles')
->add('View')
->render();
<nav aria-label="breadcrumb">
<ol class="breadcrumb">
<li class="breadcrumb-item"><a href="/">Home</a></li>
<li class="breadcrumb-item active"><a href="/articles" aria-current="page">Articles</a></li>
<li class="breadcrumb-item"><span>View</span></li>
</ol>
</nav>
The paginator helper generates bootstrap compatible/styles markup when using the helper's standard methods, and also includes a convenience method that can generate a full set of pagination controls, that is first/previous/next/last as well as page number links, all enclosed in a list wrapper.
echo $this->Paginator->first();
echo $this->Paginator->prev();
echo $this->Paginator->numbers();
echo $this->Paginator->next();
echo $this->Paginator->last();
This would generate the following HTML:
<li class="page-item first">
<a class="page-link" aria-label="First" href="/articles/index">
<span aria-hidden="true">«</span>
</a>
</li>
<li class="page-item">
<a class="page-link" rel="prev" aria-label="Previous" href="/articles/index">
<span aria-hidden="true">‹</span>
</a>
</li>
<li class="page-item">
<a class="page-link" href="/articles/index">1</a>
</li>
<li class="page-item active" aria-current="page">
<a class="page-link" href="#">2</a>
</li>
<li class="page-item">
<a class="page-link" href="/articles/index?page=3">3</a>
</li>
<li class="page-item">
<a class="page-link" rel="next" aria-label="Next" href="/articles/index?page=3">
<span aria-hidden="true">›</span>
</a>
</li>
<li class="page-item last">
<a class="page-link" aria-label="Last" href="/articles/index?page=3">
<span aria-hidden="true">»</span>
</a>
</li>
When using the standard methods you can use the label
option to pass a custom string to use for
the aria-label
attribute:
echo $this->Paginator->first('«', ['label' => __('Beginning')]);
echo $this->Paginator->prev('‹', ['label' => __('Back')]);
echo $this->Paginator->next('›', ['label' => __('Forward')]);
echo $this->Paginator->last('»', ['label' => __('End')]);
This would generate the following HTML:
<li class="page-item first">
<a class="page-link" aria-label="Beginning" href="/articles/index">
<span aria-hidden="true">«</span>
</a>
</li>
<li class="page-item">
<a class="page-link" rel="prev" aria-label="Back" href="/articles/index">
<span aria-hidden="true">‹</span>
</a>
</li>
<li class="page-item">
<a class="page-link" rel="next" aria-label="Forward" href="/articles/index?page=3">
<span aria-hidden="true">›</span>
</a>
</li>
<li class="page-item last">
<a class="page-link" aria-label="End" href="/articles/index?page=3">
<span aria-hidden="true">»</span>
</a>
</li>
A full set of pagination controls, that is first/previous/next/last as well as page number links, all enclosed in a list
wrapper, can be generated using the links()
method.
By default it renders numbers only:
echo $this->Paginator->links();
This would generate the following HTML:
<ul class="pagination">
<li class="page-item">
<a class="page-link" href="/articles/index">1</a>
</li>
<li class="page-item active" aria-current="page">
<a class="page-link" href="#">2</a>
</li>
<li class="page-item">
<a class="page-link" href="/articles/index?page=3">3</a>
</li>
</ul>
The generated controls can be configured via the first
, prev
, next
, and last
options, which each can take either
boolean true
to generate the control with the helper defaults, a string that is used as the control's text, or an
array that allows specifying the link text as well as the ARIA label.
The generated controls can be configured via the first
, prev
, next
, and last
options, which each take either
boolean true
to indicate that the control should be generated using the helper defaults, a string that is used as the
control's text, or an array with label
and text
options that determine the ARIA label value and the link text:
echo $this->Paginator->links([
'first' => '❮❮',
'prev' => true,
'next' => true,
'last' => [
'label' => 'End',
'text' => '❯❯',
],
]);
This would generate the following HTML:
<ul class="pagination">
<li class="page-item first">
<a class="page-link" aria-label="First" href="/articles/index">
<span aria-hidden="true">❮❮</span>
</a>
</li>
<li class="page-item">
<a class="page-link" rel="prev" aria-label="Previous" href="/articles/index">
<span aria-hidden="true">‹</span>
</a>
</li>
<li class="page-item">
<a class="page-link" href="/articles/index">1</a>
</li>
<li class="page-item active" aria-current="page">
<a class="page-link" href="#">2</a>
</li>
<li class="page-item">
<a class="page-link" href="/articles/index?page=3">3</a>
</li>
<li class="page-item">
<a class="page-link" rel="next" aria-label="Next" href="/articles/index?page=3">
<span aria-hidden="true">›</span>
</a>
</li>
<li class="page-item last">
<a class="page-link" aria-label="End" href="/articles/index?page=3">
<span aria-hidden="true">❯❯</span>
</a>
</li>
</ul>
The size can be specified via the size
option:
echo $this->Paginator->links([
'size' => 'lg',
]);
This would generate the following HTML:
<ul class="pagination pagination-lg">
<!-- ... -->
</ul>
You can configure each of the helpers by passing in extra parameters when loading them in your AppView.php
.
Here is an example of changing the prev
and next
labels for the Paginator helper.
$this->loadHelper('Paginator', [
'className' => 'BootstrapUI.Paginator',
'labels' => [
'prev' => 'previous',
'next' => 'next',
],
]);
- Fork
- Mod, fix
- Test - this is important, so it's not unintentionally broken
- Commit - do not mess with license, todo, version, etc. (if you do change any, put them into separate commits that can be ignored when pulling)
- Pull request - bonus point for topic branches
To ensure your PRs are considered for upstream, you MUST follow the CakePHP coding standards. A pre-commit
hook has been included to automatically run the code sniffs for you. From your project's root directory:
cp ./contrib/pre-commit .git/hooks/
chmod 755 .git/hooks/pre-commit
When working on the plugin's code you can run the tests for BootstrapUI by doing the following:
composer install
./vendor/bin/phpunit