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Forms & HTML

Opening A Form

Opening A Form

php
{{ Form::open(array('url' => 'foo/bar')) }}
	//
{{ Form::close() }}

By default, a POST method will be assumed; however, you are free to specify another method:

php
echo Form::open(array('url' => 'foo/bar', 'method' => 'put'))
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Since HTML forms only support POST and GET, PUT and DELETE methods will be spoofed by automatically adding a _method hidden field to your form.

You may also open forms that point to named routes or controller actions:

php
echo Form::open(array('route' => 'route.name'))

echo Form::open(array('action' => 'Controller@method'))

You may pass in route parameters as well:

php
echo Form::open(array('route' => array('route.name', $user->id)))

echo Form::open(array('action' => array('Controller@method', $user->id)))

If your form is going to accept file uploads, add a files option to your array:

php
echo Form::open(array('url' => 'foo/bar', 'files' => true))

CSRF Protection

Adding The CSRF Token To A Form

Laravel provides an easy method of protecting your application from cross-site request forgeries. First, a random token is placed in your user's session. If you use the Form::open method with POST, PUT or DELETE the CSRF token will be added to your forms as a hidden field automatically. Alternatively, if you wish to generate the HTML for the hidden CSRF field, you may use the token method:

php
echo Form::token();

Attaching The CSRF Filter To A Route

php
Route::post('profile', array('before' => 'csrf', function()
{
	//
}));

Form Model Binding

Opening A Model Form

Often, you will want to populate a form based on the contents of a model. To do so, use the Form::model method:

php
echo Form::model($user, array('route' => array('user.update', $user->id)))

Now, when you generate a form element, like a text input, the model's value matching the field's name will automatically be set as the field value. So, for example, for a text input named email, the user model's email attribute would be set as the value. However, there's more! If there is an item in the Session flash data matching the input name, that will take precedence over the model's value. So, the priority looks like this:

  1. Session Flash Data (Old Input)
  2. Explicitly Passed Value
  3. Model Attribute Data

This allows you to quickly build forms that not only bind to model values, but easily re-populate if there is a validation error on the server!

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When using Form::model, be sure to close your form with Form::close!

Labels

Generating A Label Element

php
echo Form::label('email', 'E-Mail Address');

Specifying Extra HTML Attributes

php
echo Form::label('email', 'E-Mail Address', array('class' => 'awesome'));
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After creating a label, any form element you create with a name matching the label name will automatically receive an ID matching the label name as well.

Text, Text Area, Password & Hidden Fields

Generating A Text Input

php
echo Form::text('username');

Specifying A Default Value

php
echo Form::text('email', 'example@gmail.com');
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The hidden and textarea methods have the same signature as the text method.

Generating A Password Input

php
echo Form::password('password');

Generating Other Inputs

php
echo Form::email($name, $value = null, $attributes = array());
echo Form::file($name, $attributes = array());

Checkboxes and Radio Buttons

Generating A Checkbox Or Radio Input

php
echo Form::checkbox('name', 'value');

echo Form::radio('name', 'value');

Generating A Checkbox Or Radio Input That Is Checked

php
echo Form::checkbox('name', 'value', true);

echo Form::radio('name', 'value', true);

Number

Generating A Number Input

php
echo Form::number('name', 'value');

File Input

Generating A File Input

php
echo Form::file('image');
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The form must have been opened with the files option set to true.

Generating A Drop-Down List

php
echo Form::select('size', array('L' => 'Large', 'S' => 'Small'));

Generating A Drop-Down List With Selected Default

php
echo Form::select('size', array('L' => 'Large', 'S' => 'Small'), 'S');

Generating A Grouped List

php
echo Form::select('animal', array(
	'Cats' => array('leopard' => 'Leopard'),
	'Dogs' => array('spaniel' => 'Spaniel'),
));

Generating A Drop-Down List With A Range

php
echo Form::selectRange('number', 10, 20);

Generating A List With Month Names

php
echo Form::selectMonth('month');

Buttons

Generating A Submit Button

php
echo Form::submit('Click Me!');
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Need to create a button element? Try the button method. It has the same signature as submit.

Custom Macros

Registering A Form Macro

It's easy to define your own custom Form class helpers called "macros". Here's how it works. First, simply register the macro with a given name and a Closure:

php
Form::macro('myField', function()
{
	return '<input type="awesome">';
});

Now you can call your macro using its name:

Calling A Custom Form Macro

php
echo Form::myField();

Generating URLs

For more information on generating URL's, check out the documentation on helpers.