234

I am trying to redirect to the previous page with a message when there is a fatal error.

App::fatal(function($exception)
{
    return Redirect::back()->with('msg', 'The Message');
}

In the view trying to access the msg with

Sessions::get('msg')

But nothing is getting rendered, am I doing something wrong here?

1
  • 2
    fix typo Sessions, and add use where needed. Apart from it - should work. Commented Jun 15, 2018 at 4:45

25 Answers 25

350

Try

return Redirect::back()->withErrors(['msg' => 'The Message']);

and inside your view call this

@if($errors->any())
<h4>{{$errors->first()}}</h4>
@endif
11
  • 14
    This works, how cool. But why wont this work return Redirect::back()->with('msg', 'The Message'); how to get the "msg" here ?
    – M T
    Commented Nov 7, 2013 at 15:25
  • Have you tried to see if the message is there? Session::has('msg') Commented Nov 7, 2013 at 15:28
  • 2
    Yes checked Session::has('msg') and the 'msg' is not there.
    – M T
    Commented Nov 7, 2013 at 15:33
  • 4
    @giannischristofakis It sure seems like it. I have no idea what I was smoking that cold foggy morning in September. Commented Aug 27, 2015 at 14:40
  • 12
    For 5.4, withErrors('some error') - so needs to be a string instead of array.
    – senty
    Commented May 17, 2017 at 6:18
206

Laravel 5 and later

Controller

 return redirect()->back()->with('success', 'your message,here');   

Blade:

@if (\Session::has('success'))
    <div class="alert alert-success">
        <ul>
            <li>{!! \Session::get('success') !!}</li>
        </ul>
    </div>
@endif
10
  • 7
    Array to string conversion :( Commented Jun 15, 2018 at 3:58
  • Comment left as edit: If it gives Error : Array to String Conversion, then just small fix in controller return redirect()->back()->with('success', 'your message here');
    – Michael
    Commented Aug 1, 2019 at 2:15
  • @Michael What do you mean if? It definitely returns an array! Commented Aug 1, 2019 at 9:35
  • 1
    This one worked in Laravel 9. In controller I have used: return redirect()->back()->with('message', 'Quantity Constraint Failed'); Inside blade of redirected location, I put @if(session()->has('message')) <p class="alert alert-success">{{session('message')}}</p> @endif
    – Rajib
    Commented May 30, 2022 at 8:03
  • 1
    @Rajib thanks, I used your code and it worked perfectly for me.
    – Vic Iyke
    Commented Jun 26, 2022 at 23:27
81

Alternative approach would be

Controller

use Session;
       
Session::flash('message', "Special message goes here");
return Redirect::back();

View

@if (Session::has('message'))
   <div class="alert alert-info">{{ Session::get('message') }}</div>
@endif
28

In Laravel 5.4 the following worked for me:

return back()->withErrors(['field_name' => ['Your custom message here.']]);
2
  • Hi. The accepted answer is for use in Laravel 4 (see the question tag), the parameters for the withErrors() method in the answer is an array with two elements: ['msg', 'The Message']. See the api for acceptable parameters: laravel.com/api/4.2/Illuminate/Http/…
    – haakym
    Commented May 8, 2017 at 17:04
  • In my answer, for use in Laravel 5.4, the parameters for the withErrors() method is an array with one element that is a key => value pair, where the value is an array. 5.4 API: laravel.com/api/5.4/Illuminate/Http/…
    – haakym
    Commented May 8, 2017 at 17:05
13

You have an error (misspelling):

Sessions::get('msg')// an extra 's' on end

Should be:

Session::get('msg')

I think, now it should work, it does for me.

12

Just set the flash message and redirect to back from your controller functiion.

    session()->flash('msg', 'Successfully done the operation.');
    return redirect()->back();

And then you can get the message in the view blade file.

   {!! Session::has('msg') ? Session::get("msg") : '' !!}
1
  • 2
    I think {!! Session::get("msg", '') !!} should be enough. get() already checks if the key exists and returns the default value otherwise. Commented Oct 3, 2017 at 22:24
11

In Laravel 5.5:

return back()->withErrors($arrayWithErrors);

In the view using Blade:

@if($errors->has())
    <ul>
    @foreach ($errors->all() as $error)
        <li>{{ $error }}</li>
    @endforeach
    </ul>
@endif
1
  • 2
    $errors->has() was fail but $errors->any() work well
    – robspin
    Commented Jun 5, 2018 at 18:42
9

For Laravel 5.5+

Controller:

return redirect()->back()->with('success', 'your message here');

Blade:

@if (Session::has('success'))
    <div class="alert alert-success">
        <ul>
            <li>{{ Session::get('success') }}</li>
        </ul>
    </div>
@endif
1
  • 1
    This works for me in Laravel 8
    – makoz
    Commented Oct 31, 2021 at 10:25
8

In laravel 5.8 you can do the following:

return redirect()->back()->withErrors(['name' => 'The name is required']);

and in blade:

@error('name')
<p>{{ $message }}</p>
@enderror
7

#Laravel-9 Inside the blade where this redirection back action initiated

   return redirect()->back()->with('message', "The Message");            

Inside the blade where this form, will be returned after the above action

                @if(session()->has('message'))
                <p class="alert alert-success"> {{ session()->get('message') }}</p>
                @endif
5

in controller

For example

return redirect('login')->with('message',$message);

in blade file The message will store in session not in variable.

For example

@if(session('message'))
{{ session('message') }}
@endif
0
5

I know this is an old post but this answer might help somebody out there.

In Laravel 8.x this is what worked for me: You can return the error to the previous page or to another page.

return Redirect::back()->withErrors(['password' => ['Invalid Username or Password']]);

This will also work:

return view('auth.login')->withErrors(['username' => ['Invalid Username or Password']]);

Please ENSURE, however, that the page/view you are returning has a field name that corresponds to the first parameter passed in the withErrors method (in this case, username or password) and that the @error directive in your view references the same field like this

@error('password') //or @error('username')
 <span class="invalid-feedback" role="alert">
   <strong>{{ $message }}</strong>
 </span>
@enderror 

for example

Hope this helps somebody. Cheers.

4

I stopped writing this myself for laravel in favor of the Laracasts package that handles it all for you. It is really easy to use and keeps your code clean. There is even a laracast that covers how to use it. All you have to do:

Pull in the package through Composer.

"require": {
  "laracasts/flash": "~1.0"
}

Include the service provider within app/config/app.php.

'providers' => [
  'Laracasts\Flash\FlashServiceProvider'
];

Add a facade alias to this same file at the bottom:

'aliases' => [
  'Flash' => 'Laracasts\Flash\Flash'
];

Pull the HTML into the view:

@include('flash::message') 

There is a close button on the right of the message. This relies on jQuery so make sure that is added before your bootstrap.

optional changes:

If you aren't using bootstrap or want to skip the include of the flash message and write the code yourself:

@if (Session::has('flash_notification.message'))
  <div class="{{ Session::get('flash_notification.level') }}">
    {{ Session::get('flash_notification.message') }}
  </div>
@endif

If you would like to view the HTML pulled in by @include('flash::message'), you can find it in vendor/laracasts/flash/src/views/message.blade.php.

If you need to modify the partials do:

php artisan view:publish laracasts/flash

The two package views will now be located in the `app/views/packages/laracasts/flash/' directory.

4

Here is the 100% solution

*Above mentioned solutions does not works for me but this one works for me in laravel 5.8:

$status = 'Successfully Done';
return back()->with(['status' => $status]);

and receive it as:

@if(session()->has('status'))
     <p class="alert alert-success">{{session('status')}}</p>
@endif
1
  • The solution will work perfectly with 5.8 just try doing it like this. Controller return back()->withErrors(['yourfieldname' => 'yourerrormsg.']); Blade @error('email') <span class="invalid-feedback" role="alert"> <strong>{{ $message }}</strong> </span> @enderror Commented Dec 26, 2020 at 9:05
4

It works for me and Laravel version is ^7.0

on Controller

return back()->with('success', 'Succesfully Added');

on Blade file

@if (session('success'))
      <div class="alert alert-success">
         {!! session('success') !!}
      </div>
@endif

For documentation look at Laravel doc

3

For laravel 5.6.*

While trying some of the provided answers in Laravel 5.6.*, it's clear there has been some improvements which I am going to post here to make things easy for those that could not find a solution with the rest of the answers.

STEP 1:

Go to your Controller File and Add this before the class:

use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Redirect;

STEP 2: Add this where you want to return the redirect.

 return Redirect()->back()->with(['message' => 'The Message']);

STEP 3: Go to your blade file and edit as follows

@if (Session::has('message'))
<div class="alert alert-error>{{Session::get('message')}}</div>
 @endif

Then test and thank me later.

This should work with laravel 5.6.* and possibly 5.7.*

3

In blade

 @if(Session::has('success'))

    <div class="alert alert-success" id="alert">
        <strong>Success:</strong> {{Session::get('success')}}
    </div>

@elseif(session('error'))
    <div class="alert alert-danger" id="alert">
        
        <strong>Error:</strong>{{Session::get('error')}}
    </div>
@endif

In controller for success

 return redirect()->route('homee')->with('success','Successfully Log in '); 

for error

 return back()->with('error',"You are not able to access");
2

I faced with the same problem and this worked.

Controller

return Redirect::back()->withInput()->withErrors(array('user_name' => $message));

View

<div>{{{ $errors->first('user_name') }}}</div>
2

laravl 8

Route::post('/user/profile', function () {
// Update the user's profile...

return redirect('/dashboard')->with('status', 'Profile updated!');
});

Blade syntax

@if (session('status'))
<div class="alert alert-success">
    {{ session('status') }}
</div>
@endif

enter link description here

2
  • As it’s currently written, your answer is unclear. Please edit to add additional details that will help others understand how this addresses the question asked. You can find more information on how to write good answers in the help center.
    – Community Bot
    Commented Mar 8, 2022 at 6:19
  • Not working on laravel 9. am i missing something
    – Rajib
    Commented May 31, 2022 at 3:59
1

For Laravel 3

Just a heads up on @giannis christofakis answer; for anyone using Laravel 3 replace

return Redirect::back()->withErrors(['msg', 'The Message']);

with:

return Redirect::back()->with_errors(['msg', 'The Message']);
1

Laravel 5.6.*

Controller

if(true) {
   $msg = [
        'message' => 'Some Message!',
       ];

   return redirect()->route('home')->with($msg);
} else {
  $msg = [
       'error' => 'Some error!',
  ];
  return redirect()->route('welcome')->with($msg);
}

Blade Template

  @if (Session::has('message'))
       <div class="alert alert-success" role="alert">
           {{Session::get('message')}}
       </div>
  @elseif (Session::has('error'))
       <div class="alert alert-warning" role="alert">
           {{Session::get('error')}}
       </div>
  @endif

Enyoj

0

I got this message when I tried to redirect as:

public function validateLogin(LoginRequest $request){
    //

    return redirect()->route('sesion.iniciar')
            ->withErrors($request)
            ->withInput();

When the right way is:

public function validateLogin(LoginRequest $request){
    //

    return redirect()->route('sesion.iniciar')
            ->withErrors($request->messages())
            ->withInput();
0

Laravel 5.8

Controller

return back()->with('error', 'Incorrect username or password.');

Blade

  @if (Session::has('error'))
       <div class="alert alert-warning" role="alert">
           {{Session::get('error')}}
       </div>
  @endif
0
    **Try This**
    
    Try This Code 
    --- Controller ---

    return redirect('list')->with('message', 'Successfully');
    return redirect('list');
   
  ----  Blade view ------
    @if(session()->has('message'))
        <div class="alert alert-success">
            {{ session()->get('message') }}
        </div>
    @endif
0

As of laravel 9.19, If you use Session::flush(), It will delete all of your session data so you should use Session::put().

use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Session;
Session::put('msg', 'The Message');

If you want to store the data in an array use,
Session::push('msg','The message'); This will return an array in your view. 

You can now access the session data in your view with the session() helper function. In your case that will be:

session('msg')

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