26

To be consistent over my coding style, I'd like to use camelCase to access attributes instead of snake_case. Is this possible in Laravel without modifying the core framework? If so, how?

Example:

// Database column: first_name

echo $user->first_name; // Default Laravel behavior
echo $user->firstName; // Wanted behavior

3 Answers 3

36

Create your own BaseModel class and override the following methods. Make sure all your other models extend your BaseModel.

namespace App;

use Illuminate\Foundation\Auth\User;
use Illuminate\Support\Str;

class BaseUser extends User
{
    public function getAttribute($key) {
        if (array_key_exists($key, $this->relations)) {
            return parent::getAttribute($key);
        } else {
            return parent::getAttribute(Str::snake($key));
        }
    }

    public function setAttribute($key, $value) {
        return parent::setAttribute(Str::snake($key), $value);
    }
}

Then for usage:

// Database column: first_name

echo $user->first_name; // Still works
echo $user->firstName; // Works too!

This trick revolves around forcing the key to snake case by overriding the magic method used in Model.

2
  • 10
    You also have to extend __isset() and __unset() methods. Otherwise isset(), empty() and unset() functions will not work properly with camel case keys. I spent half a day on this bug.
    – jaaksarv
    Nov 17, 2015 at 16:01
  • 1
    Is this also possible as trait? Dec 8, 2017 at 17:02
21

Since SO doesn't allow pasting code snippets in comments, I'm posting this as a new answer.

To make sure that eager loading does not break, I had to modify @Lazlo's answer. When accessing eagerly loaded relations by a different key, they are reloaded.

<?php

class BaseModel extends Eloquent
{

    public function getAttribute($key)
    {
        if (array_key_exists($key, $this->relations)) {
            return parent::getAttribute($key);
        } else {
            return parent::getAttribute(snake_case($key));
        }
    }

    public function setAttribute($key, $value)
    {
        return parent::setAttribute(snake_case($key), $value);
    }
}
2
  • can you explain the issue that you solved here? i'm not really following that verification you do on the relations array? Aug 5, 2016 at 20:06
  • 5
    let's say you run the query User::with('likedPosts'), it will be stored as $user->attributes['likedPosts']. However, when you override getAttribute and change everything into snake_case, then it would try to access $user->attributes['liked_posts'] when you write $user->likedPosts, which doesn't exist. Then laravel will lazy load the relationship, even though the relationship was already loaded (as likedPosts). To prevent this, the if statement is necessary. Aug 7, 2016 at 11:48
5

Just thought I'd post this in case it helps anyone else. Though the entry by Bouke is great it does not address lazy-loaded relations that use a camel-case name. When this occurs we simply need to check for the method name in addition to the other checks. The following is what I did:

class BaseModel extends Eloquent
{

    public function getAttribute($key)
    {

        if (array_key_exists($key, $this->relations)
          || method_exists($this, $key)
        )
        {
            return parent::getAttribute($key);
        }
        else
        {
            return parent::getAttribute(snake_case($key));
        }
    }

    public function setAttribute($key, $value)
    {
        return parent::setAttribute(snake_case($key), $value);
    }
}

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