I am new to Laravel. Please excuse the newbie question but how do I find if a record exists?
$user = User::where('email', '=', Input::get('email'));
What can I do here to see if $user
has a record?
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I am new to Laravel. Please excuse the newbie question but how do I find if a record exists?
$user = User::where('email', '=', Input::get('email'));
What can I do here to see if $user
has a record?
It depends if you want to work with the user afterwards or only check if one exists.
If you want to use the user object if it exists:
$user = User::where('email', '=', Input::get('email'))->first();
if ($user === null) {
// user doesn't exist
}
And if you only want to check
if (User::where('email', '=', Input::get('email'))->count() > 0) {
// user found
}
Or even nicer
if (User::where('email', '=', Input::get('email'))->exists()) {
// user found
}
exists()
against a non existent record then it gives error: Call to a member function exists() on null
– Volatil3
Sep 2 '15 at 17:54
if (User::where('email', Input::get('email'))->exists()) {
// exists
}
exists()
method.
– Robo Robok
Sep 2 '19 at 11:24
One of the best solution is to use the firstOrNew
or firstOrCreate
method. The documentation has more details on both.
if($user->isEmpty()){
// has no records
}
Eloquent uses collections. See the following link: https://laravel.com/docs/5.4/eloquent-collections
email
so ->isEmpty()
will throw an error.
– user3574492
May 10 '18 at 8:46
Call to a member function isEmpty() on null
– Pathros
Aug 28 '18 at 16:02
In laravel eloquent, has default exists() method, refer followed example.
if(User::where('id', $user_id )->exists()){
// your code...
}
if (User::where('email', 'user@email.com')->first()) {
// It exists
} else {
// It does not exist
}
Use first()
, not count()
if you only need to check for existence.
first()
is faster because it checks for a single match whereas count()
counts all matches.
Laravel 5.6.26v
to find the existing record through primary key ( email or id )
$user = DB::table('users')->where('email',$email)->first();
then
if(!$user){
//user is not found
}
if($user){
// user found
}
include " use DB " and table name user become plural using the above query like user to users
This will check if requested email exist in the user table:
if (User::where('email', $request->email)->exists()) {
//email exists in user table
}
In your Controller
$this->validate($request, [
'email' => 'required|unique:user|email',
]);
In your View - Display Already Exist Message
@if (count($errors) > 0)
<div class="alert alert-danger">
<ul>
@foreach ($errors->all() as $error)
<li>{{ $error }}</li>
@endforeach
</ul>
</div>
@endif
required|unique:users,email|email
– marcelo2605
Mar 12 '19 at 20:31
Checking for null
within if
statement prevents Laravel from returning 404 immediately after the query is over.
if ( User::find( $userId ) === null ) {
return "user does not exist";
}
else {
$user = User::find( $userId );
return $user;
}
It seems like it runs double query if the user is found, but I can't seem to find any other reliable solution.
if ($u = User::where('email', '=', $value)->first())
{
// do something with $u
return 'exists';
} else {
return 'nope';
}
would work with try/catch
->get() would still return an empty array
$email = User::find($request->email);
If($email->count()>0)
<h1>Email exist, please make new email address</h1>
endif
$user = User::where('email', request('email')->first();
return (count($user) > 0 ? 'Email Exist' : 'Email Not Exist');
This will check if particular email address exist in the table:
if (isset(User::where('email', Input::get('email'))->value('email')))
{
// Input::get('email') exist in the table
}
Shortest working options:
// if you need to do something with the user
if ($user = User::whereEmail(Input::get('email'))->first()) {
// ...
}
// otherwise
$userExists = User::whereEmail(Input::get('email'))->exists();
$user = User::where('email', '=', Input::get('email'))->first();
if ($user === null) {
// user doesn't exist
}
can be written as
if (User::where('email', '=', Input::get('email'))->first() === null) {
// user doesn't exist
}
This will return true or false without assigning a temporary variable if that is all you are using $user for in the original statement.
I think below way is the simplest way to achieving same :
$user = User::where('email', '=', $request->input('email'))->first();
if ($user) {
// user doesn't exist!
}
Created below method (for myself) to check if the given record id exists on Db table or not.
private function isModelRecordExist($model, $recordId)
{
if (!$recordId) return false;
$count = $model->where(['id' => $recordId])->count();
return $count ? true : false;
}
// To Test
$recordId = 5;
$status = $this->isModelRecordExist( (new MyTestModel()), $recordId);
Home It helps!
count
, you are counting a certain record throughout the table. While the exists
method returns true
if the table contains at least one desired record.
– AliN11
Jan 17 at 10:05
The Easiest Way to do
public function update(Request $request, $id)
{
$coupon = Coupon::where('name','=',$request->name)->first();
if($coupon->id != $id){
$validatedData = $request->validate([
'discount' => 'required',
'name' => 'required|unique:coupons|max:255',
]);
}
$requestData = $request->all();
$coupon = Coupon::findOrFail($id);
$coupon->update($requestData);
return redirect('admin/coupons')->with('flash_message', 'Coupon updated!');
}
Laravel 6 or on the top: Write the table name, then give where clause condition for instance where('id', $request->id)
public function store(Request $request)
{
$target = DB:: table('categories')
->where('title', $request->name)
->get()->first();
if ($target === null) { // do what ever you need to do
$cat = new Category();
$cat->title = $request->input('name');
$cat->parent_id = $request->input('parent_id');
$cat->user_id=auth()->user()->id;
$cat->save();
return redirect(route('cats.app'))->with('success', 'App created successfully.');
}else{ // match found
return redirect(route('cats.app'))->with('error', 'App already exists.');
}
}
Simple, comfortable and understandable with Validator
class CustomerController extends Controller
{
public function register(Request $request)
{
$validator = Validator::make($request->all(), [
'name' => 'required|string|max:255',
'email' => 'required|string|email|max:255|unique:customers',
'phone' => 'required|string|max:255|unique:customers',
'password' => 'required|string|min:6|confirmed',
]);
if ($validator->fails()) {
return response(['errors' => $validator->errors()->all()], 422);
}
It's simple to get to know if there are any records or not
$user = User::where('email', '=', Input::get('email'))->get();
if(count($user) > 0)
{
echo "There is data";
}
else
echo "No data";
here is a link to something l think can assist https://laraveldaily.com/dont-check-record-exists-methods-orcreate-ornew/
The efficient way to check if the record exists you must use is_null method to check against the query.
The code below might be helpful:
$user = User::where('email', '=', Input::get('email'));
if(is_null($user)){
//user does not exist...
}else{
//user exists...
}
you can use laravel validation if you want to insert a unique record:
$validated = $request->validate([
'title' => 'required|unique:usersTable,emailAddress|max:255',
]);
But you use these ways also:
1:
if (User::where('email', $request->email)->exists())
{
// object exists
} else {
// object not found
}
2:
$user = User::where('email', $request->email)->first();
if ($user)
{
// object exists
} else {
// object not found
}
3:
$user = User::where('email', $request->email)->first();
if ($user->isEmpty())
{
// object exists
} else {
// object not found
}
4:
$user = User::where('email', $request->email)->firstOrCreate([
'email' => 'email'
],$request->all());
count
method counts records and it is not good performance-wise in this scenario.
– AliN11
Jan 17 at 10:10
this is simple code to check email is exist or not in database
$data = $request->all(); $user = DB::table('User')->pluck('email')->toArray(); if(in_array($user,$data['email'])) { echo 'existed email'; }
$user = User::where('email', '=', Input::get('email'));
simply creates a query in$user
, you need to execute that query.findOrFail()
is one way of executing that query.get()
would be another way,firstOrFail()
another – Mark Baker Nov 23 '14 at 22:30