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

Making your authentication pages


Laravel 5.2 has made this even easier. You can read https://laravel.com/docs/5.2/authentication#authentication-quickstart and you will have all our files, routes and so on. We are just going to make sure it fits in well with our theme and shows the errors as expected.

How to do it…

  1. Following the instructions in the Laravel documentation, we have to run:

    >php artisan make:auth
    
  2. Then it will output all this info; these are the files we are going to start checking on:

  3. Then we go to our resources/views/auth/login.blade.php Blade file and change the @extends('layouts.app') on the top to "@extends('layout')"—the one we made.

    Tip

    Laravel auth scaffolding defaults to making a layouts folder and adds an app.blade.php file there. This is a convention that makes a lot of sense and sticking to default Laravel conventions is ideal, so feel free to alter the recipe to leave things as the auth command set them up as. This package leans toward a different layout name, and that...