46

I want to show the old input in input value. If there isn't old input, than show other variable:

value="{{ old('salary_' . $employee->id) or 'Default' }}"

But when there is no old input, it gives me 1 instead of the default value!

I think the problem has something to do with the concatenation, but I don't know how to fix it!?

6 Answers 6

78

or is a comparison operator in PHP, so your code is evaluating to true, or 1. What you want is a ternary if statement.

As mentioned, or can be used in blade as shorthand for a ternary if statement.

But you can (and should) just pass the default value as the second argument to the function, like so:

value="{{ old('salary_' . $employee->id, 'Default') }}"
7
  • 3
    Now here's the fun thing; using {{ $value or $default }} is a short-hand way of doing a ternary statement in Blade (Reference). Therefore, I'm not certain that this is right. It is, however, clearer! Nov 11, 2015 at 14:52
  • As in Laravel docs: {{ isset($name) ? $name : 'Default' }} shorthand way {{ $name or 'Default' }}
    – ArtisanBay
    Nov 11, 2015 at 14:54
  • @ChrisForrence you are correct! you learn something every day... the better way to accomplish this is by passing the default value as the second argument.
    – Adunahay
    Nov 11, 2015 at 14:54
  • This doesn't solve the problem. When the old input is empty, it gives nothing ... the second variable is not echoed. Nov 11, 2015 at 15:43
  • 1
    Thanks! This was exactly what I was looking for. I sure wish the Laravel Docs had more tutorials, but I guess that's the reason for the Laracasts.
    – Maximus
    Jun 22, 2017 at 17:28
15

You can use the code (for PHP 7):

{{ old('field_name') ?? $model->field_name ?? 'default' }}

For checkbox checked attribute use the code (if default value is false):

{{ (old() ? old('field_name', false) : $model->field_name ?? false) ? 'checked' : '' }}

Construction {{ $something or 'default'}} works only for variables

1
  • For checked you can use <input type="checkbox" name="active" value="active" @checked(old('active', $user->active)) /> Jan 24 at 5:13
4

You can use:

old($key, $defaultValue)

See more: https://github.com/laravel/framework/blob/87df108bb487714d205002aba7e7317533976a8d/src/Illuminate/Foundation/helpers.php#L541-L553

3

As described in the Laravel doc: "If you are displaying old input within a Blade template, it is more convenient to use the old helper:". So if you need add/edit data form (when you need to use edit form for add and edit in edit mode you need to use loaded data from model (database)) to show values from the model (through controller) you can use following:

name="some_value" value="{{ $some_value or old('some_value', $the_value) }}"

where is "some_value_from_model" variable name in view array. In this case it should be at first $some_value will be used to set in the "value" and, if no, it will try to use old (value from request from name "some_value") and if not old then '' should be used.

Thanks WoodyDRN for comment.

1
  • 10
    But if you do it this way $some_value or old('some_value') - then if the user enters anything in the input fields, and submits, and there was an error, then it would default back to $some_value and deleting whatever they wrote. old('some_value', $some_value) would fix that.
    – WoodyDRN
    Jan 26, 2017 at 10:46
0

Try this:

value="{{ old('salary_' . $employee->id) ?? 'Default' }}"

Explanation:

If an old value is there, it will be set, otherwise, 'Default' will be set as value.

-6

Try this:

<textarea name="alamat" id="" class="form-control" placeholder="Alamat">{{ old('alamat').@$biodata->alamat }}</textarea>
2
  • 4
    A more detailed explanation is needed.
    – Geshode
    Jun 21, 2018 at 1:38
  • What is this actually Jun 17, 2019 at 7:00

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