I'm going to assume you already know all about Laravel's awesome Collection class, and hopefully you've read Refactoring to Collections. (If you haven't, stop what you're doing and go buy that PDF. You'll thank me later.)
I also assume you know all about Eloquent models.
But have you ever wanted some of the functionality of a model, merged onto a collection?
This is a super small, single-class library that brings those together just a bit.
Starting with the Collection class, I wanted to add:
-
Magic getter for attributes. If you have key/value pairs in your collection, the Collection class does provide the get method. But I'm lazy. And I like accessing my collection with plain 'ol object notation. You know, like a model. Record lets you do
$collection->attribute
. -
New collection for sub-arrays. If you hand a multi-dimensional array to
collect()
and access a nested array, it's still just an array. Like$collection->get('attribute')['subattribute']
. I want collections all the way down! This will turn any sub-array into a new instance of Record, allowing you to do$record->attribute->subattribute->as->deep->as->your->array->goes
. And because you still have a real collection at each level, you can use all of the goodies like$record->attribute->subattribute->count()
. -
Custom accessors. Just like Eloquent, you can extend the Record class and define a custom accessor. Create a
getFooAttribute()
method and then just use$collection->foo
to get your custom computed attribute.
I find myself frequently needing to handle a multi-dimensional array, often a response from a remote web service. This array may have attributes (like 'name' or 'id') as well as a nested collections (like 'data' or 'rows').
Consider this:
{
"name" : "My Blog",
"url" : "http://foo.dev",
"posts" : [
{
"id" : 1,
"title" : "Hello World",
"content" : "...",
"comments" : [
{
"name" : "John Doe",
"email" : "john@example.com",
"content": "..."
}
]
},
{
"id" : 2,
"title" : "My second post",
"content" : "...",
"comments" : [
...
]
}
]
}
We can take this whole payload and navigate it quite nicely with Record:
$record = record(json_decode($webServiceResponse, true));
echo $record->name; // My Blog
echo $record->posts->count(); // 2
echo $record->posts->first()->title; // Hello World
echo $record->posts->first()->comments->count(); // 1
Nice! At each level I get a combination Laravel's Collection class, plus some attribute goodness borrowed from Model.
Furthermore I might extend Record and create a class with custom accessors to sanitize content
, or split the name
into
first and last, or... you get the idea.
You know the drill.
composer require stechstudio/laravel-record
Then you can either:
$record = new STS\Record\Record([...]);
Or you can use the record
helper method:
$record = record([...]);