Aims to help make filtering input to your Eloquent models easier.
Simplifies code like this:
class Address extends Model {
public function setPostcodeAttribute($value) {
$this->attributes['postcode'] = strtoupper(trim($value));
}
public function setCityAttribute($value) {
$this->attributes['city'] = trim($value);
}
public function getCityAttribute($value) {
return strtoupper($value);
}
}
Into this:
class Address extends Model {
use Filter\HasFilters
protected $input = [
'postcode' => 'uppercase|trim',
'city' => 'trim'
];
protected $output = [
'city' => 'uppercase'
];
}
Can also be used standalone:
$clean = Filter::filter(['city' => 'London'], ['city' => 'trim|uppercase']);
Installable via composer:
"rmasters/filter": "dev-master",
To use the model trait and service for Laravel 4, add the following lines to
config/app.php
:
'providers' => array(
// ...
'Filter\FilterServiceProvider',
'aliases' => array(
// ...
'Filter' => 'Filter\Facades\Filter',
Examples below use the Facade style (
Filter::filter()
) for brevity - standalone users should expand this to$filter->filter()
.
The standalone class is similar to Laravel's validator component:
$filtered = Filter::filter(['name' => 'Ross'], ['name' => 'trim']);
$value = Filter::filterOne('Ross', 'trim');
Rules are also constructed similarly to Validator:
Filter::filterOne('test', 'trim|upper');
Filter::filterOne('test...', 'rtrim:.');
Filter::filterOne('test', ['trim', 'upper']);
Filters are run sequentially from left to right. Arguments are parsed by
str_getcsv
- e.g. to trim commas use trim:","
.
A filter is a callable that accepts the input string and an array of arguments:
Filter::register('slugify', function($str, array $args) {
return preg_replace('/[^a-z0-9]+/', '-', strtolower($str));
});
Other callable values are classes that define an __invoke
method and function
names. For example, Zend Framework's filters all implement __invoke
, so
'Zend\I18n\Filter\Alnum'
is a valid callable.
Filters can be unregistered using Filter::unregister('slugify')
.
By default the following filters are registered:
trim trim($str)
trim:|,/ trim($str, '|/');
ltrim ltrim($str)
ltrim:|,/ ltrim($str, '|/');
rtrim rtrim($str)
rtrim:|,/ rtrim($str, '|/');
upper strtoupper($str)
lower strtolower($str)
capfirst ucfirst($str)
lowerfirst lcfirst($str)
A trait, HasFilters
is available that modifies getAttribute
(accessor) and
setAttribute
(mutator) to apply filters to the input or output value.
These filter rules are specified in properties on the model, $input
and
$output
for mutators and accessors respectively.
class Address extends Model {
use HasFilters;
public $fillable = ['line1', 'line2', 'line3', 'city', 'postcode'];
public $input = [
'line1' => 'trim',
'line2' => 'trim',
'line3' => 'trim',
'city' => 'trim',
'postcode' => 'uppercase|trim',
];
public $output = [
'city' => 'uppercase', // Uppercase only for display
];
}
The filter instance is available using App::make('filter')
, or via the facade
Filter
depending on your setup in config/app.php
.
You can still write your own accessors or mutators which will be applied as well as any filters that have been set. The following chains happen:
- Mutator:
$model->name = 'Ross'
(filters applied before your mutator)Filter\HasFilters::setAttribute
Eloquent\Model::setAttribute
Your\Model::setNameAttribute
(if defined)
- Accessor:
echo $model->name
(filters applied after your accessor)Eloquent\Model::getAttribute
Your\Model::getNameAttribute
Filter\HasFilters::getAttribute
You should not need to modify your mutators (they should still store the value
in $this->attributes[$name]
.
Released under the MIT license.