Cake\View\Helper\
UrlHelper
(View $view, array $config = [])¶The UrlHelper makes it easy for you to generate URL’s from your other helpers. It also gives you a single place to customize how URLs are generated by overriding the core helper with an application one. See the Aliasing Helpers section for how to do this.
Cake\View\Helper\UrlHelper::
build
(mixed $url = null, boolean|array $full = false)¶Returns a URL pointing to a combination of controller and action.
If $url
is empty, it returns the REQUEST_URI
, otherwise it
generates the URL for the controller and action combo. If full
is
true
, the full base URL will be prepended to the result:
echo $this->Url->build([
"controller" => "Posts",
"action" => "view",
"bar",
]);
// Output
/posts/view/bar
Here are a few more usage examples:
URL with extension:
echo $this->Url->build([
"controller" => "Posts",
"action" => "list",
"_ext" => "rss",
]);
// Output
/posts/list.rss
URL (starting with ‘/’) with the full base URL prepended:
echo $this->Url->build('/posts', true);
// Output
http://somedomain.com/posts
URL with GET parameters and fragment anchor:
echo $this->Url->build([
"controller" => "Posts",
"action" => "search",
"?" => ["foo" => "bar"],
"#" => "first",
]);
// Output
/posts/search?foo=bar#first
The above example uses the ?
key which is useful when you want to be
explicit about the query string parameters you are using, or if you want a query
string parameter that shares a name with one of your route placeholders.
URL for named route:
// Assuming a route is setup as a named route:
// $router->connect(
// '/products/:slug',
// [
// 'controller' => 'Products',
// 'action' => 'view',
// ],
// [
// '_name' => 'product-page',
// ]
// );
echo $this->Url->build(['_name' => 'product-page', 'slug' => 'i-m-slug']);
// Will result in:
/products/i-m-slug
The 2nd parameter allows you to define options controlling HTML escaping, and whether or not the base path should be added:
$this->Url->build('/posts', [
'escape' => false,
'fullBase' => true,
]);
URL with asset timestamp wrapped by a <link rel="preload"/>
, here pre-loading
a font. Note: The file must exist and Configure::read('Asset.timestamp')
must return true
or 'force'
for the timestamp to be appended:
echo $this->Html->meta([
'rel' => 'preload',
'href' => $this->Url->assetUrl(
'/assets/fonts/yout-font-pack/your-font-name.woff2'
),
'as' => 'font',
]);
New in version 3.3.5: build()
accepts an array as the 2nd argument as of 3.3.5
New in version 3.6.0: The timestamp
option was added to build()
.
If you are generating URLs for CSS, Javascript or image files there are helper methods for each of these asset types:
// Outputs /img/icon.png
$this->Url->image('icon.png');
// Outputs /js/app.js
$this->Url->script('app.js');
// Outputs /css/app.css
$this->Url->css('app.css');
// Force timestamps for one method call.
$this->Url->css('app.css', ['timestamp' => 'force']);
// Or disable timestamps for one method call.
$this->Url->css('app.css', ['timestamp' => false]);
New in version 3.2.4: The asset helper methods were added in 3.2.4.
New in version 3.6.0: The timestamp
option was added to asset helper methods.
For further information check Router::url in the API.