201

I have an Eloquent model which has a related model:

public function option() {
    return $this->hasOne('RepairOption', 'repair_item_id');
}

public function setOptionArrayAttribute($values)
{
    $this->option->update($values);
}

When I create the model, it does not necessarily have a related model. When I update it, I might add an option, or not.

So I need to check if the related model exists, to either update it, or create it, respectively:

$model = RepairItem::find($id);
if (Input::has('option')) {
    if (<related_model_exists>) {
        $option = new RepairOption(Input::get('option'));
        $option->repairItem()->associate($model);
        $option->save();
        $model->fill(Input::except('option');
    } else {
       $model->update(Input::all());
    }
};

Where <related_model_exists> is the code I am looking for.

1
  • 4
    Awesome question thank you! And great answers to the guys below. Saved me time on my project.
    – Rafael
    Commented Feb 2, 2015 at 0:31

12 Answers 12

291

In php 7.2+ you can't use count on the relation object, so there's no one-fits-all method for all relations. Use query method instead as @tremby provided below:

$model->relation()->exists()

generic solution working on all the relation types (pre php 7.2):

if (count($model->relation))
{
  // exists
}

This will work for every relation since dynamic properties return Model or Collection. Both implement ArrayAccess.

So it goes like this:

single relations: hasOne / belongsTo / morphTo / morphOne

// no related model
$model->relation; // null
count($model->relation); // 0 evaluates to false

// there is one
$model->relation; // Eloquent Model
count($model->relation); // 1 evaluates to true

to-many relations: hasMany / belongsToMany / morphMany / morphToMany / morphedByMany

// no related collection
$model->relation; // Collection with 0 items evaluates to true
count($model->relation); // 0 evaluates to false

// there are related models
$model->relation; // Collection with 1 or more items, evaluates to true as well
count($model->relation); // int > 0 that evaluates to true
17
  • 1
    Read whole thing. count($relation) is a general solution for all relations. It will work for Model and Collection, while Model has no ->count() method. Commented Jul 29, 2014 at 17:16
  • 8
    @CurvianVynes Not, it doesn't. Collection has its own method isEmpty, but generic empty function returns false for an object (thus won't work for empty collection). Commented Oct 29, 2014 at 11:10
  • 2
    count($model->relation) didn't work on morphTo when relationship had no association set yet. Foreign id and type are null and the db query built by Laravel is bogus and rises exception. I used $model->relation()->getOtherKey() as a workaround.
    – Jocelyn
    Commented Dec 28, 2014 at 13:49
  • 1
    @Jocelyn Yes, it's Eloquent bug. Unfortunately there are at least a few of them for polymorphic relations, so obviously you can't rely on them in any way. Commented Dec 28, 2014 at 19:03
  • 4
    It will break on PHP 7.2, returning: count(): Parameter must be an array or an object that implements Countable
    – CodeGodie
    Commented Jun 26, 2018 at 22:58
101

A Relation object passes unknown method calls through to an Eloquent query Builder, which is set up to only select the related objects. That Builder in turn passes unknown method calls through to its underlying query Builder.

This means you can use the exists() or count() methods directly from a relation object:

$model->relation()->exists(); // bool: true if there is at least one row
$model->relation()->count(); // int: number of related rows

Note the parentheses after relation: ->relation() is a function call (getting the relation object), as opposed to ->relation which a magic property getter set up for you by Laravel (getting the related object/objects).

Using the count method on the relation object (that is, using the parentheses) will be much faster than doing $model->relation->count() or count($model->relation) (unless the relation has already been eager-loaded) since it runs a count query rather than pulling all of the data for any related objects from the database, just to count them. Likewise, using exists doesn't need to pull model data either.

Both exists() and count() work on all relation types I've tried, so at least belongsTo, hasOne, hasMany, and belongsToMany.

6
  • exists is not available in lumen, not sure why.
    – briankip
    Commented Nov 2, 2017 at 14:54
  • @briankip -- it should. You sure you're getting the relation object (by calling the method) rather than the collection (by using the magic property)?
    – tremby
    Commented Nov 3, 2017 at 2:41
  • 3
    At least in Laravel 6.x, exists doesn't work for a morphTo relationship that doesn't exist. It gets a SQL error. Commented Aug 26, 2020 at 18:21
  • 1
    Keep in mind that calling exists() and count() on the relationship requires that the related model already be saved in the database. If you need to check for existence before the related model has been saved (for example, if you used setRelation), then you should use is_null or empty.
    – alexw
    Commented Oct 6, 2020 at 15:05
  • 1
    @OrmanFaghihiMohaddes: the text in my answer about the query builder is just part of an explanation of how this works. You're accessing a query builder via the relation you defined on the model, so yes you absolutely still are using the relations you defined on the model.
    – tremby
    Commented Mar 1, 2021 at 18:14
23

I prefer to use exists method:

RepairItem::find($id)->option()->exists()

to check if related model exists or not. It's working fine on Laravel 5.2

1
  • 2
    +1; count($model->relation) was returning true for me in Laravel 5.2 even though there was no item in the relation table. ->exists() does the trick.
    – Ben Wilson
    Commented Jul 20, 2017 at 19:37
17

After Php 7.1, The accepted answer won't work for all types of relationships.

Because depending of type the relationship, Eloquent will return a Collection, a Model or Null. And in Php 7.1 count(null) will throw an error.

So, to check if the relation exist you can use:

For relationships single: For example hasOne and belongsTo

if(!is_null($model->relation)) {
   ....
}

For relationships multiple: For Example: hasMany and belongsToMany

if ($model->relation->isNotEmpty()) {
   ....
}
1
  • 2
    Worked perfectly for me! If I eager-loaded relations and executed a ->count() in a foreach loop of results, even if they were eager-loaded in the model, it would generate an SQL query for each items. Using !is_null($model->relation) is the fastest and SQL friendly way to do it. Thanks so much.
    – raphjutras
    Commented Nov 9, 2020 at 14:31
6

I use for single relationships: hasOne, belongsTo and morphs

if($model->relation){ 
 ....
}

Because if condition is null, this will be false.

For multiple relationships: hasMany, belongsToMany and morphs

if ($model->relation->isNotEmpty()) {
   ....
}
0
4

You can use the relationLoaded method on the model object. This saved my bacon so hopefully it helps someone else. I was given this suggestion when I asked the same question on Laracasts.

0
4

As Hemerson Varela already said in Php 7.1 count(null) will throw an error and hasOne returns null if no row exists. Since you have a hasOnerelation I would use the empty method to check:

$model = RepairItem::find($id);
if (!empty($temp = $request->input('option'))) {
   $option = $model->option;

   if(empty($option)){
      $option = $model->option()->create();
   }

   $option->someAttribute = temp;
   $option->save();
};

But this is superfluous. There is no need to check if the relation exists, to determine if you should do an update or a create call. Simply use the updateOrCreate method. This is equivalent to the above:

$model = RepairItem::find($id);
if (!empty($temp = $request->input('option'))) {  
   $model->option()
         ->updateOrCreate(['repair_item_id' => $model->id],
                          ['option' => $temp]);
}
3

Not sure if this has changed in Laravel 5, but the accepted answer using count($data->$relation) didn't work for me, as the very act of accessing the relation property caused it to be loaded.

In the end, a straightforward isset($data->$relation) did the trick for me.

5
  • I believe it is $data->relation without $ (can't edit, because of 6 characters limit)
    – Zanshin13
    Commented Mar 29, 2016 at 8:47
  • 2
    Ah the $relation would be the name of your relation, such as $data->posts or such like. Sorry if that was confusing, I wanted to make it clear that relation wasn't a concrete model property :P Commented Mar 29, 2016 at 12:11
  • This was working for a while, but it stopped working after I updated Laravel from 5.2.29 to 5.2.45. Any idea why or how to fix it? It's now causing the relational data to be loaded for some reason.
    – Anthony
    Commented Oct 26, 2016 at 7:07
  • I added an answer that has a fix for this.
    – Anthony
    Commented Oct 26, 2016 at 15:52
  • This won't work in more recent versions of Laravel. Since at least Laravel 5.8, the Model::__isset method is overloaded such that it returns true even if there is no related entity. You'll need to use !is_null to avoid the magic isset logic. They have confirmed that this is a known bug in Laravel that will be fixed in Laravel 8: github.com/laravel/framework/issues/31793
    – alexw
    Commented Nov 24, 2020 at 15:56
2

If you use the model class and use Eloquent ORM, then create a new method and return bool data. like

public function hasPosts(): bool
{
    return $this->posts()->exists();
}
1

I had to completely refactor my code when I updated my PHP version to 7.2+ because of bad usage of the count($x) function. This is a real pain and its also extremely scary as there are hundreds usages, in different scenarios and there is no one rules fits all..

Rules I followed to refactor everything, examples:

$x = Auth::user()->posts->find(6); (check if user has a post id=6 using ->find())

[FAILS] if(count($x)) { return 'Found'; } 
[GOOD] if($x) { return 'Found'; }

$x = Auth::user()->profile->departments; (check if profile has some departments, there can have many departments)

[FAILS] if(count($x)) { return 'Found'; }
[GOOD] if($x->count()) { return 'Found'; }

$x = Auth::user()->profile->get(); (check if user has a profile after using a ->get())

[FAILS] if(count($x)) { return 'Found'; }
[GOOD] if($x->count()) { return 'Found'; }

Hopes this can help, even 5 years after the question has been asked, this stackoverflow post has helped me a lot!

0

RelationLoaded method of Model class could be useful.

if ($this->relationLoaded('prices')) {
    return;
}
0

There are several ways, but in each case your project version may not be taken into account. Be careful.

Either you use the relationLoaded() method as shown in the following example

$user = User::find(1);
if ($user->relationLoaded('posts')) {
    // The "posts" relation is loaded for this user
}

You can use the has() method

$user->has('posts');

you can use the method exists()

if ($user->posts()->exists()) {
    // The user has associated articles ("posts" relationship)
}

you can also use the method_exists() function $user = new User;

if (method_exists($user, 'posts')) {
     // The model has a "posts" relationship method
}

Note, once again, that in each case, the version of your project may not be taken into account.

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