Blade Templates
Introduction
Blade is the simple, yet powerful templating engine provided with Laravel. Unlike other popular PHP templating engines, Blade does not restrict you from using plain PHP code in your views. In fact, all Blade views are compiled into plain PHP code and cached until they are modified, meaning Blade adds essentially zero overhead to your application. Blade view files use the .blade.php file extension and are typically stored in the resources/views directory.
Template Inheritance
Defining A Layout
Two of the primary benefits of using Blade are template inheritance and sections. To get started, let's take a look at a simple example. First, we will examine a "master" page layout. Since most web applications maintain the same general layout across various pages, it's convenient to define this layout as a single Blade view:
<!-- Stored in resources/views/layouts/app.blade.php -->
<html>
<head>
<title>App Name - @yield('title')</title>
</head>
<body>
@section('sidebar')
This is the master sidebar.
@show
<div class="container">
@yield('content')
</div>
</body>
</html>
As you can see, this file contains typical HTML mark-up. However, take note of the @section and @yield directives. The @section directive, as the name implies, defines a section of content, while the @yield directive is used to display the contents of a given section.
Now that we have defined a layout for our application, let's define a child page that inherits the layout.
Extending A Layout
When defining a child view, use the Blade @extends directive to specify which layout the child view should "inherit". Views which extend a Blade layout may inject content into the layout's sections using @section directives. Remember, as seen in the example above, the contents of these sections will be displayed in the layout using @yield:
<!-- Stored in resources/views/child.blade.php -->
@extends('layouts.app')
@section('title', 'Page Title')
@section('sidebar')
@@parent
<p>This is appended to the master sidebar.</p>
@endsection
@section('content')
<p>This is my body content.</p>
@endsection
In this example, the sidebar section is utilizing the @@parent directive to append (rather than overwriting) content to the layout's sidebar. The @@parent directive will be replaced by the content of the layout when the view is rendered.
Contrary to the previous example, this sidebar section ends with @endsection instead of @show. The @endsection directive will only define a section while @show will define and immediately yield the section.
Blade views may be returned from routes using the global view helper:
Route::get('blade', function () {
return view('child');
});
Components & Slots
Components and slots provide similar benefits to sections and layouts; however, some may find the mental model of components and slots easier to understand. First, let's imagine a reusable "alert" component we would like to reuse throughout our application:
<!-- /resources/views/alert.blade.php -->
<div class="alert alert-danger">
{{ $slot }}
</div>
The {{ $slot }} variable will contain the content we wish to inject into the component. Now, to construct this component, we can use the @component Blade directive:
@component('alert')
<strong>Whoops!</strong> Something went wrong!
@endcomponent
Sometimes it is helpful to define multiple slots for a component. Let's modify our alert component to allow for the injection of a "title". Named slots may be displayed by "echoing" the variable that matches their name:
<!-- /resources/views/alert.blade.php -->
<div class="alert alert-danger">
<div class="alert-title">{{ $title }}</div>
{{ $slot }}
</div>
Now, we can inject content into the named slot using the @slot directive. Any content not within a @slot directive will be passed to the component in the $slot variable:
@component('alert')
@slot('title')
Forbidden
@endslot
You are not allowed to access this resource!
@endcomponent
Passing Additional Data To Components
Sometimes you may need to pass additional data to a component. For this reason, you can pass an array of data as the second argument to the @component directive. All of the data will be made available to the component template as variables:
@component('alert', ['foo' => 'bar'])
...
@endcomponent
Aliasing Components
If your Blade components are stored in a sub-directory, you may wish to alias them for easier access. For example, imagine a Blade component that is stored at resources/views/components/alert.blade.php. You may use the component method to alias the component from components.alert to alert. Typically, this should be done in the boot method of your AppServiceProvider:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Blade;
Blade::component('components.alert', 'alert');
Once the component has been aliased, you may render it using a directive:
@alert(['type' => 'danger'])
You are not allowed to access this resource!
@endalert
You may omit the component parameters if it has no additional slots:
@alert
You are not allowed to access this resource!
@endalert
Displaying Data
You may display data passed to your Blade views by wrapping the variable in curly braces. For example, given the following route:
Route::get('greeting', function () {
return view('welcome', ['name' => 'Samantha']);
});
You may display the contents of the name variable like so:
Hello, {{ $name }}.
Of course, you are not limited to displaying the contents of the variables passed to the view. You may also echo the results of any PHP function. In fact, you can put any PHP code you wish inside of a Blade echo statement:
The current UNIX timestamp is {{ time() }}.
Blade {{ }} statements are automatically sent through PHP's htmlspecialchars function to prevent XSS attacks.
Displaying Unescaped Data
By default, Blade {{ }} statements are automatically sent through PHP's htmlspecialchars function to prevent XSS attacks. If you do not want your data to be escaped, you may use the following syntax:
Hello, {!! $name !!}.
Be very careful when echoing content that is supplied by users of your application. Always use the escaped, double curly brace syntax to prevent XSS attacks when displaying user supplied data.
Rendering JSON
Sometimes you may pass an array to your view with the intention of rendering it as JSON in order to initialize a JavaScript variable. For example:
<script>
var app = <?php echo json_encode($array); ?>;
</script>
However, instead of manually calling json_encode, you may use the @json Blade directive:
<script>
var app = @json($array);
</script>
HTML Entity Encoding
By default, Blade (and the Laravel e helper) will double encode HTML entities. If you would like to disable double encoding, call the Blade::withoutDoubleEncoding method from the boot method of your AppServiceProvider:
<?php
namespace App\Providers;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Blade;
use Illuminate\Support\ServiceProvider;
class AppServiceProvider extends ServiceProvider
{
/**
* Bootstrap any application services.
*
* @return void
*/
public function boot()
{
Blade::withoutDoubleEncoding();
}
}
Blade & JavaScript Frameworks
Since many JavaScript frameworks also use "curly" braces to indicate a given expression should be displayed in the browser, you may use the @ symbol to inform the Blade rendering engine an expression should remain untouched. For example:
<h1>Laravel</h1>
Hello, @{{ name }}.
In this example, the @ symbol will be removed by Blade; however, {{ name }} expression will remain untouched by the Blade engine, allowing it to instead be rendered by your JavaScript framework.
The @verbatim Directive
If you are displaying JavaScript variables in a large portion of your template, you may wrap the HTML in the @verbatim directive so that you do not have to prefix each Blade echo statement with an @ symbol:
@verbatim
<div class="container">
Hello, {{ name }}.
</div>
@endverbatim
Control Structures
In addition to template inheritance and displaying data, Blade also provides convenient shortcuts for common PHP control structures, such as conditional statements and loops. These shortcuts provide a very clean, terse way of working with PHP control structures, while also remaining familiar to their PHP counterparts.
If Statements
You may construct if statements using the @if, @elseif, @else, and @endif directives. These directives function identically to their PHP counterparts:
@if (count($records) === 1)
I have one record!
@elseif (count($records) > 1)
I have multiple records!
@else
I don't have any records!
@endif
For convenience, Blade also provides an @unless directive:
@unless (Auth::check())
You are not signed in.
@endunless
In addition to the conditional directives already discussed, the @isset and @empty directives may be used as convenient shortcuts for their respective PHP functions:
@isset($records)
// $records is defined and is not null...
@endisset
@empty($records)
// $records is "empty"...
@endempty
Authentication Directives
The @auth and @guest directives may be used to quickly determine if the current user is authenticated or is a guest:
@auth
// The user is authenticated...
@endauth
@guest
// The user is not authenticated...
@endguest
If needed, you may specify the authentication guard that should be checked when using the @auth and @guest directives:
@auth('admin')
// The user is authenticated...
@endauth
@guest('admin')
// The user is not authenticated...
@endguest
Section Directives
You may check if a section has content using the @hasSection directive:
@hasSection('navigation')
<div class="pull-right">
@yield('navigation')
</div>
<div class="clearfix"></div>
@endif
Switch Statements
Switch statements can be constructed using the @switch, @case, @break, @default and @endswitch directives:
@switch($i)
@case(1)
First case...
@break
@case(2)
Second case...
@break
@default
Default case...
@endswitch
Loops
In addition to conditional statements, Blade provides simple directives for working with PHP's loop structures. Again, each of these directives functions identically to their PHP counterparts:
@for ($i = 0; $i < 10; $i++)
The current value is {{ $i }}
@endfor
@foreach ($users as $user)
<p>This is user {{ $user->id }}</p>
@endforeach
@forelse ($users as $user)
<li>{{ $user->name }}</li>
@empty
<p>No users</p>
@endforelse
@while (true)
<p>I'm looping forever.</p>
@endwhile
When looping, you may use the loop variable to gain valuable information about the loop, such as whether you are in the first or last iteration through the loop.
When using loops you may also end the loop or skip the current iteration:
@foreach ($users as $user)
@if ($user->type == 1)
@continue
@endif
<li>{{ $user->name }}</li>
@if ($user->number == 5)
@break
@endif
@endforeach
You may also include the condition with the directive declaration in one line:
@foreach ($users as $user)
@continue($user->type == 1)
<li>{{ $user->name }}</li>
@break($user->number == 5)
@endforeach
The Loop Variable
When looping, a $loop variable will be available inside of your loop. This variable provides access to some useful bits of information such as the current loop index and whether this is the first or last iteration through the loop:
@foreach ($users as $user)
@if ($loop->first)
This is the first iteration.
@endif
@if ($loop->last)
This is the last iteration.
@endif
<p>This is user {{ $user->id }}</p>
@endforeach
If you are in a nested loop, you may access the parent loop's $loop variable via the parent property:
@foreach ($users as $user)
@foreach ($user->posts as $post)
@if ($loop->parent->first)
This is first iteration of the parent loop.
@endif
@endforeach
@endforeach