Laravel package to compile Blade templates in memory. Requires PHP 8.0 or higher, compatible with Laravel 9.
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Did you hear about Laravel Splade? 🤩
It's the magic of Inertia.js with the simplicity of Blade. Splade provides a super easy way to build Single Page Applications using Blade templates. Besides that magic SPA-feeling, it comes with more than ten components to sparkle your app and make it interactive, all without ever leaving Blade.
You can install the package via composer:
composer require protonemedia/laravel-blade-on-demand
You can render any valid Blade Template by calling the render
method on the BladeOnDemand
facade. The method only takes two parameters, the template content and the data you want to pass to the template.
$output = BladeOnDemand::render('Hello {{ $name }}', ['name' => 'Protone Media']);
echo $output;
// "Hello Protone Media"
This is a just an example but you can use statements, components and other Blade features as well.
This feature prevents your render from failing whenever a variable is missing in your data array. By default it will fill the missing variable with the name of the variable itself. In this case $name
is missing so the data array becomes ['name' => 'name']
;
$output = BladeOnDemand::fillMissingVariables()->render('Hello {{ $name }}', []);
echo $output;
// "Hello name"
You could also use this feature to preview a template without any data. Note that this might give unexpected results when using statements. You can also pass a callable
to the fillMissingVariables
method to customize the handling of missing variables:
$output = BladeOnDemand::fillMissingVariables(
fn ($variable) => "_MISSING_{$variable}_MISSING_"
)->render('Hello {{ $name }}');
echo $output;
// "Hello _MISSING_name_MISSING_"
This feature can be used to render a mail as if you're using a Markdown mailable.
$contents = implode(PHP_EOL, [
'@component("mail::message")',
'# Hello {{ $name }}',
'@endcomponent',
]);
$output = BladeOnDemand::renderMarkdownMailToHtml($contents, ['name' => 'Protone Media']);
echo $output;
// <!DOCTYPE>
// <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
// <head>
// ...
// </head>
// <body>
// <style>
// ...
// </style>
// <table>
// ...
// <h1>Hello Protone Media</h1>
// ...
// </table>
// </body>
// </html>
You can optionally specify a theme, just like calling the theme
method on a Mailable.
BladeOnDemand::theme('invoice')->renderMarkdownMailToHtml($contents, $data);
Similair feature as the above renderMarkdownMailToHtml
method except it uses components from the text
directory. You can read more about this feature in the Laravel documentation.
$contents = implode(PHP_EOL, [
'@component("mail::message")',
'# Hello {{ $name }}',
'@endcomponent',
]);
$output = BladeOnDemand::renderMarkdownMailToText($contents, ['name' => 'Protone Media']);
echo $output;
// [AppName](http://localhost)
//
// # Hello Protone Media
//
// © 2020 AppName. All rights reserved.
The parseMarkdownMail
method is the same as the renderMarkdownMailToText
method but it also parses the Markdown.
$contents = implode(PHP_EOL, [
'@component("mail::message")',
'# Hello {{ $name }}',
'@endcomponent',
]);
$output = BladeOnDemand::parseMarkdownMail($contents, ['name' => 'Protone Media']);
echo $output;
// <p><a href="http://localhost">AppName</a></p>
// <h1>Hello Protone Media</h1>
// <p>© 2020 AppName. All rights reserved.</p>
composer test
Please see CHANGELOG for more information what has changed recently.
Please see CONTRIBUTING for details.
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If you discover any security related issues, please email pascal@protone.media instead of using the issue tracker.
The MIT License (MIT). Please see License File for more information.