My application is made up with eight bundles, within my main layout I would like to check if a certain bundle exists so I can include a sub template, how do I go about doing this?
3 Answers
Thanks to @DonCallisto, I decided to make a twig function to use in my templates, the following is my twig extension.
<?php
namespace MG\AdminBundle\Twig;
use Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\ContainerInterface;
class Bundles extends \Twig_Extension {
protected $container;
public function __construct(ContainerInterface $container) {
$this->container = $container;
}
public function getFunctions()
{
return array(
new \Twig_SimpleFunction(
'bundleExists',
array($this, 'bundleExists')
),
);
}
public function bundleExists($bundle){
return array_key_exists(
$bundle,
$this->container->getParameter('kernel.bundles')
);
}
public function getName() {
return 'mg_admin_bundles';
}
}
I then registered it in my services.yml
services:
mg_admin.bundles.extension:
class: MG\AdminBundle\Twig\Bundles
arguments: [@service_container]
tags:
- { name: twig.extension }
Now in my twig templates I can check for registered bundles like this:
{% if bundleExists('MGEmailBundle') %}
{% include 'MGEmailBundle:SideBar:sidebar.html.twig' %}
{% endif %}
-
Yes, great idea. I had it in mind but I was "running off" the keybord so I dind't wrote a "more complex" answer. This is the right way. +1 :) Feb 21, 2014 at 8:51
-
1you dont have to inject the whole container, just inject parameter
%kernel.bundles%
– gondoAug 10, 2014 at 16:42
$this->container->getParameter('kernel.bundles');
will return all registered bundles (class names). You could pass that list - or parse it direclty - into a controller and pass it to your twig view
Then you should easily reach your target
If the bundle you want to check is a specific bundle, and you know the main class name, the easiest way may be:
if (class_exists('Acme\CommentBundle\AcmeCommentBundle'))
{
// Bundle exists and is loaded by AppKernel...
}