Book Image

Laravel 5.x Cookbook

By : Terry Matula, Alfred Nutile
Book Image

Laravel 5.x Cookbook

By: Terry Matula, Alfred Nutile

Overview of this book

Laravel is a prominent member of a new generation of web frameworks. It is one of the most popular PHP frameworks and is also free and an open source. Laravel 5 is a substantial upgrade with a lot of new toys, at the same time retaining the features that made Laravel wildly successful. It comes with plenty of architectural as well as design-based changes. The book is a blend of numerous recipes that will give you all the necessary tips you need to build an application. It starts with basic installation and configuration tasks and will get you up-and-running in no time. You will learn to create and customize your PHP app and tweak and re-design your existing apps for better performance. You will learn to implement practical recipes to utilize Laravel’s modular structure, the latest method injection, route caching, and interfacing techniques to create responsive modern-day PHP apps that stand on their own against other apps. Efficient testing and deploying techniques will make you more confident with your Laravel skills as you move ahead with this book. Towards the end of the book, you will understand a number of add-ons and new features essential to finalize your application to make it ready for subscriptions. You will be empowered to get your application out to the world.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Laravel 5.x Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Building a view based route


In the preceding recipe, we showed how to build a JSON-based API response in a route with a real view. I will show here just how simple it is in routes to output a View. Typically, I would use a controller but in this case I will not, just to show how you can experiment in a route at different levels.

Getting ready

A base install will be fine for this one.

How to do it…

  1. Let's add another route for this:

  2. Then, make a view to handle that route resources/views/examples/route_view.blade.php:

  3. And give it a look http://recipes.dev/example_view:

How it works…

Pretty nice how simple this is! I have worked in other frameworks where making routes is a chore in abstraction and speed, or lack of speed.

In this case, we can quickly play with ideas and show results in a view right from the route. You could build an entire API in the route for small microservices.

In this case I just make an array, put it into the view using the php compact syntax, and display it. Notice too the dot notation...