touhidurabir / eloquent-wherelike
An extended laravel eloquent WHERE method to work with sql LIKE operator.
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Requires
- php: >=7.4
Requires (Dev)
- orchestra/testbench: ^6.21
- phpunit/phpunit: ^9.5
This package is auto-updated.
Last update: 2024-12-26 14:40:33 UTC
README
An extended laravel eloquent WHERE method to work with sql LIKE operator.
Inspiration
The idea of this package comes from one of the Freek's Blog Post. I had developed this macro, which is a slightly different variation of what is described there and using it for years. So I have decided to release this as a package, so that I don't have to copy paste same code again and again and at the same time others can use this to save a little bit of their time.
Installation
Require the package using composer:
composer require touhidurabir/eloquent-wherelike
To publish the config file:
php artisan vendor:publish --provider="Touhidurabir\EloquentWherelike\EloquentWherelikeServiceProvider" --tag=config
Configurations
The config file contains one important configuration option; the operator which defines the SQL operator that will be used to perform the query. By default it's set to LIKE, but you can update it as you see fit. For example, for PostgreSQL, it should be set to ILIKE.
Usage
As this whereLike method is defined as a macro, just use it like any eloquent method.
$users = User::whereLike(['email', 'name'], 'search_term')->get();
The first param will be the targeted columns to search for and second one is the actual search term.
One big advantage of this package is that is allows searches based on model relations. For example, say a user as one profile, and the profile table has first_name and last_name columns. In order to search users whose first name match, we can do following:
$users = User::whereLike( [ 'email', 'name', '.profile[first, last_name]' ], 'search_term' )->get();
Here, notice the syntax
'.profile[first, last_name]'
the initial dot(.) defines what is the relation, where the opeing and closing third bracked([]) define the columns of that relation model/table. In this example, we are also looking into the profile relations first_name
and last_name
columns.
A more advance example from one of my projects:
$campaigns = $campaigns->whereLike( [ 'title', 'description', '.user.profile[first_name, last_name]', '.categories[name]', '.campaigntype[title]', '.team[name]' ], $search )->get();
In the above example, we are searching for all campaigns based on, not only from campaigns table column, but from it's relation models' columns also.
Now, if we want to write the whole thing without using this package, we would have to write:
$campaigns = $campaigns->where(function ($query) use ($search) { $query ->where('title', 'LIKE', '%' . $search . '%') ->orWhere('description', 'LIKE', '%' . $search . '%') ->orWhereHas('user', function($query) use ($search) { $query->whereHas('profile', function($query) use ($search) { $query->where('first_name', 'LIKE', '%' . $search . '%') ->orWhere('last_name', 'LIKE', '%' . $search . '%'); }); }) ->orWhereHas('categories', function($query) use ($search) { $query->where('name', 'LIKE', '%' . $search . '%'); }) ->orWhereHas('campaigntype', function($query) use ($search) { $query->where('title', 'LIKE', '%' . $search . '%'); }) ->orWhereHas('team', function($query) use ($search) { $query->where('name', 'LIKE', '%' . $search . '%'); }); })->get();
This whereLike saves us so much time this way! 🎉
Contributing
Pull requests are welcome. For major changes, please open an issue first to discuss what you would like to change.
Please make sure to update tests as appropriate.