117

I am rather new to laravel. I have a basic question, What is the best way to add constants in laravel. I know the .env method that we use to add the constants. Also I have made one constants file to use them for my project. For example:

define('OPTION_ATTACHMENT', 13);
define('OPTION_EMAIL', 14);
define('OPTION_MONETERY', 15);
define('OPTION_RATINGS', 16);
define('OPTION_TEXTAREA', 17);

And so on. It can reach upto 100 or more records. So What should be the best approach to write the constants. The .env method. Or adding the constant.php file?

Thanks

5
  • 1
    you can choose a lot of places: 1) a regular (my)SQL db 2) a key-value story / nosql db like redis 3) the config folder, using your own config file and probably many more. Best practice would be probably option 3 and also the fastest Feb 10, 2017 at 9:28
  • Maybe this answer can be useful for you :stackoverflow.com/a/26062788/6028607
    – Nutshell
    Feb 10, 2017 at 9:29
  • @VincentG like I have explained above. I dont think .env is the best choice. I have a long list of constants.
    – Faran Khan
    Feb 10, 2017 at 10:33
  • Possible duplicate of Laravel: Where to store global arrays data and constants? Apr 25, 2019 at 10:13
  • 2
    Your accepted answer does not align with your question or example. A constant is not a config variable that will change. It is exactly how it is labeled, a constant value that does not change no matter what. The answer given by @Neekobus is the correct approach for constants. You may want to revise the accepted answer.
    – John C
    Sep 11, 2020 at 15:01

12 Answers 12

191

For most constants used globally across the application, storing them in config files is sufficient. It is also pretty simple

Create a new file in the config directory. Let's call it constants.php

In there you have to return an array of config values.

return [
    'options' => [
        'option_attachment' => '13',
        'option_email' => '14',
        'option_monetery' => '15',
        'option_ratings' => '16',
        'option_textarea' => '17',
    ]
];

And you can access them as follows

config('constants.options');
// or if you want a specific one
config('constants.options.option_attachment');
9
  • 6
    @KArunSingh why didnt you just point to duplicate stackoverflow.com/questions/26854030/… .
    – blamb
    Aug 10, 2017 at 17:16
  • 3
    in mathematics, the adjective constant means non-varying which means this is not the "correct answer"
    – naT erraT
    Nov 3, 2017 at 20:09
  • 18
    remember to run php artisan config:cache after adding the constants.php file
    – elijah7
    Nov 7, 2017 at 15:54
  • 3
    Also I think it should be \Config::get('constants.options'); or \Config::get('constants.options.option_attachment'); with backslash
    – Pedro Luz
    Jan 25, 2018 at 10:57
  • 7
    One can also call it with the config helper config('constants.options');
    – Adam
    Sep 14, 2018 at 7:03
123

I use aliased class constants :

First, create your class that contain your constants : App/MyApp.php for exemple

namespace App;

class MyApp {
   const MYCONST = 'val';
}

Then add it to the aliased classes in the config/app.php

'aliases' => [
  //...
  'MyApp' => App\MyApp::class,

Finally use them wherever you like (controllers or even blades) :

MyApp::MYCONST
7
  • 2
    I like this approach. This will help other developers to easily track where constants are coming from instead of declaring it to your auto load. Is there any drawback of using this approach?
    – SMPLYJR
    Oct 29, 2019 at 1:33
  • 1
    For constants, I can't see any drawbacks. For config (changing with environment) is not fitted. Use Config:get instead.
    – Neekobus
    Oct 30, 2019 at 10:46
  • 2
    This is a better and faster option than the "accepted answer" thanks!
    – gtamborero
    May 23, 2020 at 21:23
  • like that approach as well (just remind of using composer dump-autoload after the changes
    – heavyrick
    Aug 20, 2020 at 16:49
  • 1
    @wruckie Typically people will make a subfolder under app called Support for this type of stuff. Nov 4, 2022 at 15:43
21

Your question was about the 'best practices' and you asked about the '.env method'.

.env is only for variables that change because the environment changes. Examples of different environments: test, acceptance, production.

So the .env contains database credentials, API keys, etc.

The .env should (imho) never contain constants which are the same over all environments. Just use the suggested config files for that.

1
  • Yup... Makes sense...
    – Vagabond
    Oct 18, 2023 at 12:24
18

First you make Constants folder inside your app directory.

And then you make Constants.php. Define your constants in this file

For Example :

define('ONE', '1');
define('TWO', '2');

And you modify the composer.json

Alternatively, you can use composer.json to load the bootstrap/constants.php file by adding the following code to the “autoload” section, like so:

"autoload": {
    "files": [
        "bootstrap/constants.php"
    ]
}

And update your composer !

1
  • It would be good if write as defined('ONE') || define('ONE', '1');
    – Trung
    Jul 9, 2020 at 4:33
17

You can create a file named paths.php in root directory/config/paths.php

Insert this data into paths.php

define('OPTION_ATTACHMENT', 13);
define('OPTION_EMAIL', 14);
define('OPTION_MONETERY', 15);
define('OPTION_RATINGS', 16);
define('OPTION_TEXTAREA', 17);

Note : make sure to run command : php artisan config:clear

1
  • 9
    Why paths.php? Seems pretty random. Sep 19, 2021 at 0:43
14

I would personally create a class for that.

<?php

namespace App\Transaction\Constants;

/**
 * Class TransactionTypeConstant.
 */
final class TransactionTypeConstant
{
    public const TYPE_CREDIT = 'CREDIT';
    public const TYPE_DEBIT = 'DEBIT';
}

and use it like this:

<?php

namespace App\Transaction;

use App\Transaction\Constants\TransactionTypeConstant;

class Transaction
{
    /**
     * Execute the task.
     *
     * @return object
     */
    public function run()
    {
        if ($transaction->type === TransactionTypeConstant::TYPE_DEBIT) {
            //do something
        }
    }
}
4
  • 1
    This approach will works for all. However in this case configs are not cacheble. Jul 19, 2021 at 4:53
  • 1
    I like this solution because it looks clean and works for all scenarios.
    – CodeNinja
    Nov 11, 2021 at 14:46
  • for me this is the best way to do it, simple and elegant, thanks
    – edocollado
    Apr 7, 2022 at 20:40
  • @edocollado Since you posted that after it released, 8.1 provides proper enum support that could be used for this same syntax. They're a bit tighter in focus and may be better for this than conventional classes with constants.
    – Rikaelus
    May 27, 2023 at 2:49
14

I think you should not have a single place for all your constants. Especially no file called constance.php.

I use PHP constance in classes and refer to them in code, so its more readable, typically to avoid magic numbers and typos in strings

Car::where('car_type','=', 'fast_car')->get();

and rather have

Car::where('car_type','=', CarType::FAST)->get();

If its a value that depends on your environment (like email setting, should be different local vs production), then you should add it to a matching files in the config folder (e.g. '/config/mail.php'). You may also just add a new file in the config folder. A config file returns an array, so it could look like this:

<?php

return [
  'your_option' => env('YOUR_OPTION')
];

and you can read it using the config helper:

config('your_config_file.your_option');

Its important to never call the env function outside a configuration file, as the env function returns null outside a configuration file when cache is enabled.

If the option does not rely on your environment, you can just add it directly to the matching config file.

<?php

return [
  'your_option' => 10
];
0
11

Another way as following:

  1. create the constant.php file in app/config directory
  2. in composer.json file, add the directives like this:

    "autoload": {
       "classmap": [
           "database/seeds",
           "database/factories"
       ],
       "psr-4": {
           "App\\": "app/"
       },
       "files": [
           "app/helpers.php",
           "app/config/constants.php"
       ]
    }
    
0
2

You can define constants at the top of the web.php file located in routes and can be access the constants anywhere in project with just constant name

define('OPTION_ATTACHMENT', 13);
define('OPTION_EMAIL', 14);
define('OPTION_MONETERY', 15);
define('OPTION_RATINGS', 16);
define('OPTION_TEXTAREA', 17);
2

You can simply do this:

  1. Put your constants to 'config/app.php' on main array, like:

    'CONSTANT_NAME' => 'CONSTANT_VALUE',
    
  2. Use them where ever you want with:

    {{ Config::get('CONSTANT_NAME') }} 
    
0
require app_path().'/constants.php';

define('ADMIN',  'administrator');

or -

You can also move more sensitive info

return [
   'hash_salt' => env('HASH_SALT'),
 ];

And use it like before:

 echo Config::get('constants.hash_salt');
0

i think best way to define constant using a helper file. check my solution.

Define file path in composer.json

   "extra": {
        "laravel": {
            "dont-discover": []
        }
    },
    "autoload": {
        "files": [
            "app/helpers.php",
            "app/Helper/function.php"  // constant defined here
        ],

app/Helper/function.php

define("assetPath","UI/");
define("viewPath","UI/");

use this constant anywhere in project. i am using in blade file.

  <script src="{{asset(assetPath.'js/jquery.min.js')}}"></script>
  <script src="{{asset(assetPath.'js/popper.min.js')}}"></script>
  <script src="{{asset(assetPath.'js/bootstrap.min.js')}}"></script>

my approach is better than this

Config::get('constants.options');
Config::get('constants.options.option_attachment');

here another problem is this , you have to run cache:clear or cache command for this. but my approach not required this.

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