1

I am looking for the way to bind data in to form with input groups. For exmaple I have these inputs:

Form::text('purchaser[address]');
Form::text('seller[address]');

and I want to bind data from my variable - $purchaser which has a field 'address' and $seller also with field 'address'. I know that forms can be filled using laravel

Form::model

but I can't find example how to use it for input groups. Is there even such a possibility or I have to do it manually?

4
  • Do you also have your purchaser defined in a model, or just in the database? e.g. Purchaser.php in your app/models?
    – cchapman
    Jan 30, 2015 at 14:32
  • Yes I have the model and the $purchaser is an object of this model Jan 30, 2015 at 14:34
  • @PiotrSuchanek Check my answer, you can do what you need Jan 30, 2015 at 15:25
  • Could you please post your model? If purchaser is a publicly accessible property of your model, the code you posted should work. Jan 30, 2015 at 15:28

2 Answers 2

1

Edit: I got it wrong I suppose. You want just fill the address field value, not address relation, but with a group of models, right?

So, you can easily do this:

$purchaser = Purchaser::with('address')->find($someId);

$groups = new Illuminate\Support\Collection;

$groups->put('purchaser', $purchaser);
$groups->put('another_model', $anotherModel);

// then
Form::model($groups->toArray())
  Form::text('purchaser[address]')
  Form::text('another_model[some_field]')

First you need to load the address, then you need to call it in array manner:

// eager load
$purchaser = Purchaser::with('address')->find($someId);
// or lazy load
$purchaser->load('address');

// then:
Form::model($purchaser, ...)
  Form::text('address[street]')
  Form::text('address[city]')
  // and so on
1

From the docs, I think you're pretty close:

Form::model($purchaser);

Then, if you want an <input type="text"> with the address value in it, you would call:

Form::text("address");

And Laravel should supply the value from the model for you.

Please note, this assumes that you have a model for $purchaser defined. If not, do that first.

Usually, I just do <input> elements manually as I feel I have more control. In this case:

<input type="text" name="address" value="{{ $purchaser->address }}" class="..."/>

And I can edit and modify that whenever I want, especially the class and value attributes.

Hope that helps!

3
  • That'll do it. The $purchaser->address should work as long as the address is defined in the Purchaser model.
    – cchapman
    Jan 30, 2015 at 14:38
  • I know you can do it this way, but my form is a very large and 'address' field is also present in other places, so I used input groups. I'd like to now fill them in some automated way. Jan 30, 2015 at 14:40
  • Do you want to show an example of what you're using right now? I'm a little confused what you mean. Post the html mark up of your of your input groups
    – Tim Lewis
    Jan 30, 2015 at 14:42

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.