92

Im passing data to my blade view with return View::make('blog', $posts); and in my blade view I'm trying to run an @foreach ($posts as $post) I end up with an error saying that $posts isn't defined.

My question is how would the $posts array be called?

3
  • 5
    return View::make('blog',compact('posts')); Aug 20, 2013 at 19:39
  • 7
    To be clear, the 2nd parameter needs to be an associative array: array('posts' => $posts), or you can use the with() method as shown in the accepted answer.
    – fideloper
    Aug 20, 2013 at 21:00
  • return view('blog',compact('posts'));
    – panjeh
    Oct 12, 2019 at 13:58

16 Answers 16

110

You can pass data to the view using the with method.

return View::make('blog')->with('posts', $posts);
3
  • How to pass collection ?
    – mercury
    Jul 6, 2016 at 19:24
  • 4
    How to get it on view?
    – Arun
    Aug 15, 2016 at 16:08
  • 1
    @MadhuramanGhimire write @foreach($posts as $post){ {{$post->title}} {{$post->author}} } or any other data that you need in the view. Jan 4, 2020 at 7:09
88

As of Laravel 5, the View::make() facade method from the 2013 accepted answer has been deprecated. Passing data to the view is now done using the view() helper function like this:

return view("blog", ["posts"=>$posts]);

Or, the same thing:

return view("blog", compact("posts"));

This can be combined with the with() method if desired:

return view("blog", compact("posts"))->with("message", "Comment posted");

Documentation is available here.

3
  • True, but I still use with() to send bootstrap flash error/success messages to the view. Don't know how that could be done with compact(). Jan 4, 2020 at 7:11
  • 2
    @Don'tDownvoteMe you can use the two together. return view("blog", compact("posts"))->with("success", "Hooray!");
    – miken32
    Mar 8, 2020 at 22:49
  • @miken32 Thx Mike, never knew we could use with() along with compact(). Mar 12, 2020 at 4:38
22

If you want to pass just one variable to view, you may use

In Controller

return view('blog')->withTitle('Laravel Magic method.');

In view

<div>
  Post title is {{$title}}.
</div>

If you want to pass multiple variables to view, you may use

In Controller

return view('blog')->withTitle('Laravel magic method')->withAuthor('Mister Tandon');

In view

<div>
   Post title is {{$title}}.Author Name is {{$author}}
</div>
1
  • 2
    Thanks for also showing how to use the variable in the blade template. That's the part I was missing. Mar 28, 2019 at 12:43
14

You can also pass an array as the second argument after the view template name, instead of stringing together a bunch of ->with() methods.

return View::make('blog', array('posts' => $posts));

Or, if you're using PHP 5.4 or better you can use the much nicer "short" array syntax:

return View::make('blog', ['posts' => $posts]);

This is useful if you want to compute the array elsewhere. For instance if you have a bunch of variables that every controller needs to pass to the view, and you want to combine this with an array of variables that is unique to each particular controller (using array_merge, for instance), you might compute $variables (which contains an array!):

return View::make('blog', $variables);

(I did this off the top of my head: let me know if a syntax error slipped in...)

2
  • please clarify my concept!! array('posts' => $posts) i have never seen this kind of Array is this an anonymous Array??? where is its name ?? All i know is that this array has key value pair Jul 20, 2015 at 20:22
  • You can call it an anonymous array. So in that case when 'posts' array is passed to the view the key will be used as the name to access the $posts which are there inside the array.
    – girish
    Feb 10, 2018 at 20:04
9

Tips1:

Using With(), This is a best practice

return view('about')->withName('Author Willson')->withJob('Writer');
return View::make('home')->with(compact('about'))
return View::make('home')->with('comments', $comments);

Tips2:

Using compact()

return view(about, compact('post1','post2'));

Tips3:

Using Second Parameters:

return view("about", ["comments"=>$posts]);
1
  • 1
    Why best practice tips1? Can't we use type2 directly.
    – ufuk
    Feb 6, 2020 at 12:54
7

controller:

use App\your_model_name;
funtion index()
{
$post = your_model_name::all();
return view('index')->with('this_will_be_used_as_variable_in_views',$post);
}

index:

<h1> posts</h1>
@if(count($this_will_be_used_as_variable_in_views)>0)
@foreach($this_will_be_used_as_variable_in_views as $any_variable)
<ul>
<p> {{$any_variable->enter_table_field}} </p>
 <p> {{$any_variable->created_at}} </p>
</ul>

@endforeach
@else
<p> empty </p>
@endif

Hope this helps! :)

6
use TCG\Voyager\Models\Jobtype;

class FormController extends Controller
{
public function index()
{
   $category = Jobtype::all();
   return view('contact', compact('category'));

}
}
  • use your model
  • assign it to a variabel
  • pass the object to the view Here is an example:
5

You can also do like this

$arr_view_data['var1'] = $value1;
$arr_view_data['var2'] = $value2;
$arr_view_data['var3'] = $value3;

return view('your_viewname_here',$arr_view_data);

And you access this variable to view as $var1,$var2,$var3

0
4

You can also do the same thing in another way,

If you are using PHP 5.5 or latest one then you can do it as follow,

Controller:

return view(index, compact('data1','data2')); //as many as you want to pass

View:

<div>
    You can access {{$data1}}. [if it is variable]
</div>

@foreach($data1 as $d1)
    <div>
        You can access {{$d1}}. [if it is array]
    </div>
@endforeach

Same way you can access all variable that you have passed in compact function.

Hope it helps :)

0
2

You can pass data to the view using the with method.

return view('greeting', ['name' => 'James']);
2

You can pass your table data to view using compact.

$users = RoleModel::get();
 return view('super-admin',compact('users'));
1

You can also write for passing multiple data from your controller to a view

 return \View::make('myHome')
            ->with(compact('project'))
            ->with(['hello'=>$hello])
            ->with(['hello2'=>$hello2])
            ->with(['hello3'=>$hello3]);
1

OK all the answers tell you how to pass data to the view but no one explains how to read it in the view .
if you use :

 //Routes/web.php
 ...
 Route::get('/user', function () {
    return view('profile', [
       'variable1' => 'value1' ,
       'variable2'=> 'value2' , // add as much as you want
    ]);
 });

To read these variables use in your views (in this example it's profile.blade.php file):

@if($variable1)

 <p> variable1 = {{  $variable1  }}</p>

@endif

Laravel does all the necessary work and creates $variable1 for you .

0
0

Suppose if the variable name is $posts then we're passing an associative array where the key is posts and the value is the $posts array you want to pass.

return View::make('blog', ['posts' => $posts]);

Or we can use the with method to pass data.

return view('blog')->with('posts', $posts);

In your Blade view, you can access the $posts variable using Blade syntax like this:

@foreach ($posts as $post)
    {{-- Your code to display each post --}}
@endforeach
-1

For example, you have an array with your data.

$array1  =  $data;
$array2 = $data;

From your controller you can pass this variable using compact. You can pass as many array as you want.

return view('data.index',compact('array1','array2'));

Here data is a folder in view and index is the file with extension index.blade.php

In view you can call the arrays like this

@foreach ($array1 as $something)
   // some operation
@endforeach
-6

For any one thinking it is really tedious in the case where you have tons of variables to pass to a view or you want the variables to be accessible to many views at the same, here is another way

In the controller, you define the variables you want to pass as global and you attribute the values to these variables.

Example global $variable; $variable = 1;

And now in the view, at the top, simply do

<?php global $variable;?>

Then you can now call your variable from any where in the view for example

{{$variable}}

hope this helps someone.

2
  • 1
    This is bad advice. You can easily pass data to a view in the controller why would you want to put it in global scope? @tkc
    – FabricioG
    Mar 21, 2019 at 19:51
  • 1
    you might override one of laravel's global attributes and break everything apart ! Mar 15, 2022 at 9:53

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