devdojo / laravel-reactions
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Requires
- php: ^8.1|^8.2
- illuminate/database: ^9.0|^10.0|^11.0
- illuminate/support: ^9.0|^10.0|^11.0
Requires (Dev)
- friendsofphp/php-cs-fixer: ^3.35
- mockery/mockery: ^1.6
- orchestra/testbench: ^8.0
- phpunit/phpunit: ^9.5.0
README
Laravel Reactions is the package you need if you want to implement reactions for your Eloquent models, in a similar way you can see on Facebook.
Features
- easy to install, nothing to configure;
- ready-to-use traits;
- you can implement reactions for multiple entities, thanks to a polymorphic many to many relationship;
- you can implement reactions from multiple entities, thanks to some extra magic under the hood;
Disclaimer
This project is not associated with Facebook in any way. I've used the "reactions" just to give an idea of the concept. In case of legal issues, let me know using an email.
Install
Install the package with Composer.
$ composer require DevDojo/laravel-reactions
Add the Service Provider to your config/app.php
file.
DevDojo\LaravelReactions\Providers\ReactionsServiceProvider::class,
Run the migrations to create reactions
and reactables
tables.
$ php artisan migrate
You're good to go.
Usage
Add Traits to Models
To use the package you need to follow two steps:
- add the
DevDojo\LaravelReactions\Traits\Reacts
trait to the entity that is going to react to something; - add the
DevDojo\LaravelReactions\Traits\Reactable
trait to the entity that is going to "receive" reactions; - be sure that the entity that receives reactions also implements the
DevDojo\LaravelReactions\Contracts\ReactableInterface
;
Let's make an example.
Imagine that you have some users in your application. You are building a blog, so you will have posts.
You want to let your user add reactions to your posts. Just like Facebook, you know.
Let's say we have two models: User
and Post
.
Following the steps, we first add the DevDojo\LaravelReactions\Traits\Reacts
trait to our User
model.
use DevDojo\LaravelReactions\Traits\Reacts; class User extends Model { use Reacts; }
Done! Now, to the Post
model!
use DevDojo\LaravelReactions\Traits\Reactable; use DevDojo\LaravelReactions\Contracts\ReactableInterface; class Post extends Model implements ReactableInterface { use Reactable; }
Ta-dah! You're done.
By default, the package ships with a Reaction
model. This model has a single, simple property: its name
. You can create a new one easily, with
$likeReaction = Reaction::createFromName('like'); $likeReaction->save(); $loveReaction = Reaction::createFromName('love'); $loveReaction->save();
React!
Our models are ready. We can use them. How?
// picking the first user, for this example... $user = User::first(); // the previously created reaction $likeReaction = Reaction::where('name', '=', 'like')->first(); // picking up a post... $awesomePost = Post::first(); // react to it! $user->reactTo($awesomePost, $likeReaction);
Easy, isn't it? The reactTo
method handles everything for you.
Get Reactions for a Model
Just like you can let one of your entities react to another one, you should be able to get all the reactions for an entity.
Let's see how to do it.
// picking up a post... $awesomePost = Post::first(); // get all reactions $reactions = $awesomePost->reactions;
In $reactions
you will have a collection of Reaction
models, ready to be used.
Get a Reactions Summary
Probably you won't need everything about reactions to a specific entity everytime. So, I implemented a getReactionsSummary
for you.
// picking up a post... $awesomePost = Post::first(); // get a summary of related reactions $reactionsSummary = $awesomePost->getReactionsSummary();
In $reactionsSummary
you will find a collection of items, composed by two properties: name
and count
. Imagine that we do something like the following code in a controller:
$reactionsSummary = $awesomePost->getReactionsSummary(); return $reactionsSummary;
Here's what we will get:
[ { "name": "like", "count": 12 }, { "name": "love", "count": 7 } ]
Accessing the "Responder"
When on Facebook, you can see "who" reacted in some way to a post. To get that who
you can use the getResponder
method. This works for every reaction you get using the reactions
relationship method, of course.
Let's assume that a User
named "Francesco" already reacted with the "love" reaction to a post.
// our awesome post. $awesomePost = Post::first(); // every $reaction is a Reaction model foreach($awesomePost->reactions as $reaction) { $user = $reaction->getResponder(); // this will output "Francesco" echo $user->name; }
Change log
Please see CHANGELOG for more information on what has changed recently.
Testing
$ vendor/bin/phpunit
Contributing
Please see CONTRIBUTING and CONDUCT for details.
Security
If you discover any security related issues, please email hellofrancesco@gmail.com instead of using the issue tracker.
Credits
License
The MIT License (MIT). Please see License File for more information.