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I am looking to manipulate the $session->flash() output in my CakePHP app, Currently I have the very simple default implementation of showing flash and auth error messages:

<?php
    $session->flash();
    $session->flash('auth');
?>

This produces a <div> with an ID and class that has the message inside. What I would like to do is wrap/replace the generated HTML, specifically with some jQuery UI classes, but wrapping is difficult as I am unable to tell when there is actually a message going to be displayed so I end up with an empty but style error div. What I really need for wrapping to work is to check in $session->flash() returns anything, but I get 'can't use method return value in write context' when checking it with empty();

As far as I can tell the generated HTML is hard coded into the session helper! Bonus points if you can work out how to change the class on the auth message and normal flash message independently.

3 Answers 3

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To check if a message is going to be flashed, put this in the layout

<?php if($session->check('Message')){ echo $this->Session->flash();} ?>

CSS attributs can be set when you set the message to be flashed

http://book.cakephp.org/view/1311/Methods#setFlash-1313

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  • This is the best solution so far. Specifically I used 'Message.auth' to check for auth messages. Thanks.
    – Dunhamzzz
    Jan 24, 2011 at 20:59
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read up on setFlash() and use the other params that the method takes to define your own elements. you can then do what ever you like.

http://book.cakephp.org/view/400/setFlash

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  • The Auth flash message is automatic though, I can set the actual message itself using $this->Auth->authError but not the layout it uses.
    – Dunhamzzz
    Jan 24, 2011 at 14:14
  • no its not, it uses the exact same code as the other messages and as such can do the exact same things. all setting the auth message is doing is writing it to Message.auth as array(....) with the params
    – dogmatic69
    Jan 26, 2011 at 10:14
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A work-around solution I have found is to set $session->flash() to a variable and then check it with empty() so I can echo out the appropriate <div> if necessary.

$flashMessage = $this->flash();
$authMessage = $this->flash('auth');

.. and then check if each one is empty. Of course I have some unnecessary html inside there but as far as the auth message goes, I think this is as flexible as I can get.

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