This document is for a version of CakePHP that is no longer supported. Please upgrade to a newer release!
Views are the V in MVC. Views are responsible for generating the specific output required for the request. Often this is in the form of HTML, XML, or JSON, but streaming files and creating PDF’s that users can download are also responsibilities of the View Layer.
The view layer of CakePHP is how you speak to your users. Most of the time your views will be showing (X)HTML documents to browsers, but you might also need to serve AMF data to a Flash object, reply to a remote application via SOAP, or output a CSV file for a user.
CakePHP view files are written in plain PHP and have a default extension of .ctp (CakePHP Template). These files contain all the presentational logic needed to get the data it received from the controller in a format that is ready for the audience you’re serving to.
View files are stored in /app/views/, in a folder named after the controller that uses the files, and named after the action it corresponds to. For example, the view file for the Products controller’s “view()” action, would normally be found in /app/views/products/view.ctp.
The view layer in CakePHP can be made up of a number of different parts. Each part has different uses, and will be covered in this chapter:
layouts: view files that contain presentational code that is found wrapping many interfaces in your application. Most views are rendered inside of a layout.
elements: smaller, reusable bits of view code. Elements are usually rendered inside of views.
helpers: these classes encapsulate view logic that is needed in many places in the view layer. Among other things, helpers in CakePHP can help you build forms, build AJAX functionality, paginate model data, or serve RSS feeds.
A layout contains presentation code that wraps around a view. Anything you want to see in all of your views should be placed in a layout.
Layout files should be placed in /app/views/layouts. CakePHP’s default layout can be overridden by creating a new default layout at /app/views/layouts/default.ctp. Once a new default layout has been created, controller-rendered view code is placed inside of the default layout when the page is rendered.
When you create a layout, you need to tell CakePHP where to place the code for your views. To do so, make sure your layout includes a place for $content_for_layout (and optionally, $title_for_layout). Here’s an example of what a default layout might look like:
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN"
"http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
<head>
<title><?php echo $title_for_layout?></title>
<link rel="shortcut icon" href="favicon.ico" type="image/x-icon">
<!-- Include external files and scripts here (See HTML helper for more info.) -->
<?php echo $scripts_for_layout ?>
</head>
<body>
<!-- If you'd like some sort of menu to
show up on all of your views, include it here -->
<div id="header">
<div id="menu">...</div>
</div>
<!-- Here's where I want my views to be displayed -->
<?php echo $content_for_layout ?>
<!-- Add a footer to each displayed page -->
<div id="footer">...</div>
</body>
</html>
$scripts_for_layout
contains any external files and scripts included
with the built-in HTML helper. Useful for including javascript and CSS
files from views.
When using $html->css()
or $javascript->link()
in view files,
specify ‘false’ for the ‘in-line’ argument to place the html source in
$scripts_for_layout
. (See API for more details on usage).
$content_for_layout
contains the view. This is where the view code
will be placed.
$title_for_layout
contains the page title.
To set the title for the layout, it’s easiest to do so in the controller, using the $pageTitle controller variable.
<?php
class UsersController extends AppController {
function viewActive() {
$this->pageTitle = 'View Active Users';
}
}
?>
You can create as many layouts as you wish: just place them in the app/views/layouts directory, and switch between them inside of your controller actions using the controller’s $layout variable, or setLayout() function.
For example, if a section of my site included a smaller ad banner space, I might create a new layout with the smaller advertising space and specify it as the layout for all controller’s actions using something like:
var $layout = 'default_small_ad';
<?php
class UsersController extends AppController {
function viewActive() {
$this->pageTitle = 'View Active Users';
$this->layout = 'default_small_ad';
}
function viewImage() {
$this->layout = 'image';
//output user image
}
}
?>
CakePHP features two core layouts (besides CakePHP’s default layout) you can use in your own application: ‘ajax’ and ‘flash’. The Ajax layout is handy for crafting Ajax responses - it’s an empty layout (most ajax calls only require a bit of markup in return, rather than a fully-rendered interface). The flash layout is used for messages shown by the controllers flash() method.
Three other layouts xml, js, and rss exist in the core for a quick and easy way to serve up content that isn’t text/html.
Many applications have small blocks of presentation code that need to be repeated from page to page, sometimes in different places in the layout. CakePHP can help you repeat parts of your website that need to be reused. These reusable parts are called Elements. Ads, help boxes, navigational controls, extra menus, login forms, and callouts are often implemented in CakePHP as elements. An element is basically a mini-view that can be included in other views, in layouts, and even within other elements. Elements can be used to make a view more readable, placing the rendering of repeating elements in its own file. They can also help you re-use content fragments in your application.
Elements live in the /app/views/elements/ folder, and have the .ctp filename extension. They are output using the element method of the view.
<?php echo $this->element('helpbox'); ?>
You can pass data to an element through the element’s second argument:
<?php echo
$this->element('helpbox',
array("helptext" => "Oh, this text is very helpful."));
?>
Inside the element file, all the passed variables are available as
members of the parameter array (in the same way that set()
in the
controller works with view files). In the above example, the
/app/views/elements/helpbox.ctp file can use the $helptext
variable.
<?php
echo $helptext; //outputs "Oh, this text is very helpful."
?>
The element()
function combines options for the element with the
data for the element to pass. The two options are ‘cache’ and ‘plugin’.
An example:
<?php echo
$this->element('helpbox',
array(
"helptext" => "This is passed to the element as $helptext",
"foobar" => "This is passed to the element as $foobar",
"cache" => "+2 days", //sets the caching to +2 days.
"plugin" => "" //to render an element from a plugin
)
);
?>
To cache different versions of the same element in an application, provide a unique cache key value using the following format:
<?php
$this->element('helpbox',
array(
"cache" => array('time'=> "+7 days",'key'=>'unique value')
)
);
?>
You can take full advantage of elements by using requestAction()
.
The requestAction()
function fetches view variables from a
controller action and returns them as an array. This enables your
elements to perform in true MVC style. Create a controller action that
prepares the view variables for your elements, then call
requestAction()
inside the second parameter of element()
to feed
the element the view variables from your controller.
To do this, in your controller add something like the following for the Post example.
<?php
class PostsController extends AppController {
...
function index() {
$posts = $this->paginate();
if (isset($this->params['requested'])) {
return $posts;
} else {
$this->set('posts', $posts);
}
}
}
?>
And then in the element we can access the paginated posts model. To get the latest five posts in an ordered list we would do something like the following:
<h2>Latest Posts</h2>
<?php $posts = $this->requestAction('posts/index/sort:created/direction:asc/limit:5'); ?>
<?php foreach($posts as $post): ?>
<ol>
<li><?php echo $post['Post']['title']; ?></li>
</ol>
<?php endforeach; ?>
You can take advantage of CakePHP view caching if you supply a cache parameter. If set to true, it will cache for 1 day. Otherwise, you can set alternative expiration times. See Caching for more information on setting expiration.
<?php echo $this->element('helpbox', array('cache' => true)); ?>
If you render the same element more than once in a view and have caching enabled be sure to set the ‘key’ parameter to a different name each time. This will prevent each succesive call from overwriting the previous element() call’s cached result. E.g.
<?php
echo $this->element('helpbox', array('cache' => array('key' => 'first_use', 'time' => '+1 day'), 'var' => $var));
echo $this->element('helpbox', array('cache' => array('key' => 'second_use', 'time' => '+1 day'), 'var' => $differentVar));
?>
The above will ensure that both element results are cached separately.
If you are using a plugin and wish to use elements from within the plugin, just specify the plugin parameter. If the view is being rendered for a plugin controller/action, it will automatically point to the element for the plugin. If the element doesn’t exist in the plugin, it will look in the main APP folder.
<?php echo $this->element('helpbox', array('plugin' => 'pluginname')); ?>
The plugin name should be specified in under_score convention.
View methods are accessible in all view, element and layout files. To
call any view method use $this->method()
set(string $var, mixed $value)
Views have a set()
method that is analogous to the set()
found
in Controller objects. It allows you to add variables to the
viewVars. Using set() from your view file will add the variables
to the layout and elements that will be rendered later. See
Controllers for more
information on using set().
In your view file you can do
$this->set('activeMenuButton', 'posts');
Then in your layout the $activeMenuButton
variable will be available
and contain the value ‘posts’.
getVar(string $var)
Gets the value of the viewVar with the name $var
getVars()
Gets a list of all the available view variables in the current rendering scope. Returns an array of variable names.
error(int $code, string $name, string $message)
Displays an error page to the user. Uses layouts/error.ctp to render the page.
$this->error(404, 'Not found', 'This page was not found, sorry');
This will render an error page with the title and messages specified.
Its important to note that script execution is not stopped by
View::error()
So you will have to stop code execution yourself if
you want to halt the script.
element(string $elementPath, array $data, bool $loadHelpers)
Renders an element or view partial. See the section on Views for more information and examples.
uuid(string $object, mixed $url)
Generates a unique non-random DOM ID for an object, based on the object type and url. This method is often used by helpers that need to generate unique DOM ID’s for elements such as the AjaxHelper.
$uuid = $this->uuid('form', array('controller' => 'posts', 'action' => 'index'));
//$uuid contains 'form0425fe3bad'
addScript(string $name, string $content)
Adds content to the internal scripts buffer. This buffer is made
available in the layout as $scripts_for_layout
. This method is
helpful when creating helpers that need to add javascript or css
directly to the layout. Keep in mind that scripts added from the layout,
or elements in the layout will not be added to $scripts_for_layout
.
This method is most often used from inside helpers, like the
Javascript and HTML
Helpers.
You can take advantage of themes, making it easy to switch the look and feel of your page quickly and easily.
To use themes, you need to tell your controller to use the ThemeView class instead of the default View class.
class ExampleController extends AppController {
var $view = 'Theme';
}
To declare which theme to use by default, specify the theme name in your controller.
class ExampleController extends AppController {
var $view = 'Theme';
var $theme = 'example';
}
You can also set or change the theme name within an action or within the
beforeFilter
or beforeRender
callback functions.
$this->theme = 'another_example';
Theme view files need to be within the /app/views/themed/ folder. Within the themed folder, create a folder using the same name as your theme name. Beyond that, the folder structure within the /app/views/themed/example/ folder is exactly the same as /app/views/.
For example, the view file for an edit action of a Posts controller would reside at /app/views/themed/example/posts/edit.ctp. Layout files would reside in /app/views/themed/example/layouts/.
If a view file can’t be found in the theme, CakePHP will try to locate the view file in the /app/views/ folder. This way, you can create master view files and simply override them on a case-by-case basis within your theme folder.
If you have CSS or JavaScript files that are specific to your theme, you can store them in a themed folder within webroot. For example, your stylesheets would be stored in /app/webroot/themed/example/css/ and your JavaScript files would be stored in /app/webroot/themed/example/js/.
All of CakePHP’s built-in helpers are aware of themes and will create the correct paths automatically. Like view files, if a file isn’t in the theme folder, it’ll default to the main webroot folder.
Media views allow you to send binary files to the user. For example, you may wish to have a directory of files outside of the webroot to prevent users from direct linking them. You can use the Media view to pull the file from a special folder within /app/, allowing you to perform authentication before delivering the file to the user.
To use the Media view, you need to tell your controller to use the MediaView class instead of the default View class. After that, just pass in additional parameters to specify where your file is located.
class ExampleController extends AppController {
function download () {
$this->view = 'Media';
$params = array(
'id' => 'example.zip',
'name' => 'example',
'download' => true,
'extension' => 'zip',
'path' => APP . 'files' . DS
);
$this->set($params);
}
}
Here’s an example of rendering a file whose mime type is not included in
the MediaView’s $mimeType
array.
function download () {
$this->view = 'Media';
$params = array(
'id' => 'example.docx',
'name' => 'example',
'extension' => 'docx',
'mimeType' => array('docx' => 'application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document'),
'path' => APP . 'files' . DS
);
$this->set($params);
}
Parameters |
Description |
---|---|
id |
The ID is the file name as it resides on the file server including the file extension. |
name |
The name allows you to specify an alternate file name to be sent to the user. Specify the name without the file extension. |
download |
A boolean value indicating whether headers should be set to force download. Note that your controller’s autoRender option should be set to false for this to work correctly. |
extension |
The file extension. This is matched against an internal list of acceptable mime types. If the mime type specified is not in the list (or sent in the mimeType parameter array), the file will not be downloaded. |
path |
The folder name, including the final directory separator. The path should be absolute, but can be relative to the APP/webroot folder. |
mimeType |
An array with additional mime types to be merged with MediaView internal list of acceptable mime types. |
cache |
A boolean or integer value - If set to true it will allow browsers to cache the file (defaults to false if not set); otherwise set it to the number of seconds in the future for when the cache should expire. |
modified |
Last modified date/time of the file in a format compatible with strtotime(). Defaults to the current time if not set. Example: ‘modified’ => ‘@’ . filemtime($filepath) |