Laravel is a web application framework with expressive, elegant syntax. It's one of the most popular PHP frameworks today.
Laraish brings the Laravel Framework into WordPress, which allow us to have all the benefits of Laravel. So you can create themes with less effort, more enjoyment!
- Requirement
- What Laraish is and is not
- What's the difference between the original Laravel?
- Get Started
- Known Issue
The 99% of Laraish is just the regular full stack PHP Framework Laravel. So if you have never heard of it, you're going to want to take a look at it before you can go any further.
For those who are already familiar with Laravel, it should be a piece of cake for you to get started with Laraish.
Laraish is not a framework for general purpose WordPress theme development.
Yes, it is a framework but not for general WordPress theme development. Laraish is aimed at helping create "homemade theme" rather than general purpose theme. So if you want to create themes with a bunch of theme options for sales or just for free distribution, you probably want to take a look at the following frameworks instead.
I'd say almost no differences there, except some additional tweaking, which gets Laravel to work well inside a WordPress theme. So basically you could do anything that you could do with Laravel, it's just the regular Laravel inside a WordPress theme. If you are curious about what exactly have been modified, taking a diff to the original Laravel would make sense for you.
You can install Laraish by issuing the following command via Composer.
composer create-project --prefer-dist laraish/laraish <theme-name>
Note that the MySQL server and the web server must be running before you can issue the composer create-project
command to install Laraish. Because after Composer finishes the installation, it's going to run an artisan command, which requires MySQL server and the web server that host the WordPress be running at the time you issuing the command.
Also, notice that if you are on Mac and use MAMP or similar application to create your local server environment you may need to change your $PATH
environment variable to make Composer use the PHP binary that MAMP provides rather than the OS's built-in PHP binary.
To ensure the asset()
function operates correctly, open the .env
file and insert the ASSET_URL
key. Assign it the value of <THEME_PATH/public>
.
For instance:
ASSET_URL=/wp-content/themes/Laraish/public
Laraish replaced the original UriValidator
(Illuminate\Routing\Matching\UriValidator
) with its own one to allow you to specify WordPress specific routes, like "archive" or "page" or "custom post type" ex.
You define your WordPress-specific-routes in the routes/wp.php
file.
For example:
use App\Http\Controllers\Wp\Home;
use App\Http\Controllers\Wp\Page;
use App\Http\Controllers\Wp\Post;
use App\Http\Controllers\Wp\NotFound;
use Laraish\Support\Facades\WpRoute;
// Regular post pages
WpRoute::post('post', [Post::class, 'index']);
// Post pages where post-type is 'movie'
WpRoute::post('movie', [Post::class, 'index']);
// The archive page of "movie" post type.
WpRoute::postArchive('movie', [Home::class, 'index']);
// The child page "works" of the "about" page.
WpRoute::page('about.works', [Page::class, 'index']);
// Any child pages of the "about" page.
WpRoute::page('about.*', [Page::class, 'index']);
// Any descendant pages of the "about" page.
WpRoute::page('about.**', [Page::class, 'index']);
// The "about" page ("about" is the slug of the page)
WpRoute::page('about', [Page::class, 'index']);
// The archive page of "foobar" term of "category" taxonomy.
WpRoute::taxonomy('category.foobar', [Home::class, 'index']);
// The archive page of "category" taxonomy.
WpRoute::taxonomy('category', [Home::class, 'index']);
// The archive page of author "jack".
WpRoute::author('jack', [Home::class, 'index']);
// The archive page for all authors.
WpRoute::author([Home::class, 'index']);
// The search result page
WpRoute::search([Home::class, 'index']);
// All pages
WpRoute::page([Page::class, 'index']);
// The home/front page.
WpRoute::home([Home::class, 'index']);
// All archive pages.
WpRoute::archive([Home::class, 'index']);
// The 404 page.
WpRoute::notFound([NotFound::class, 'index']);
Here are some notes you should keep in mind.
- You can use a "dot notation" to specify the hierarchy for pages and taxonomies.
- You can use the wild card to specify any child/descendant page/term of a parent/ancestor page/term.
- You should care about the order of your routes. Routes that has a higher specificity should be placed more above than the routes that have a lower specificity.
The position of the route is very important.
Here is a bad example:
use App\Http\Controllers\Wp\Page;
use Laraish\Support\Facades\WpRoute;
WpRoute::page([Page::class, 'index']);
WpRoute::page('works', [Page::class, 'works']);
The problem of this code is that the second route will never get matched. Because the first route matches to any pages, so all routes after the first one will be simply ignored. That is, routes that has a higher specificity should be placed above the routes that have a lower specificity.
If you don't like to specify a route manually, you could always use the auto-discovery strategy instead. By turning on auto discovery routing, Laraish resolves the controller or view automatically the way similar to WordPress.
use App\Http\Controllers\Wp\Home;
use App\Http\Controllers\Wp\Page;
use Laraish\Support\Facades\WpRoute;
WpRoute::home([Home::class, 'index']);
WpRoute::page([Page::class, 'index']);
// Fallback to auto discovery routing.
WpRoute::autoDiscovery();
Notice that you should always place auto discovery routing in the last line of your route file.
With this featured turned on, Laraish will try to find a controller or view that matches to the following naming convention.
in the <ViewRoot>/wp
directory:
- home.blade.php
- search.blade.php
- archive.blade.php
- post.blade.php
- post
- {$post_type}.blade.php
- post-archive
- {$post_type}.blade.php
- page.blade.php
- page
- {$page_slug}.blade.php
- {$page_slug}
- {$child_page}.blade.php
- …
- template
- {$template_slug}.blade.php
- taxonomy.blade.php
- taxonomy
- {$taxonomy}.blade.php
- {$taxonomy}
- {$term}.blade.php
- {$term}
- {$child_term}.blade.php
- …
- author.blade.php
- {$nicename}.blade.php
Same rule applied to the controllers under the namespace App\Http\Controllers\Wp
.
For example, If the coming request is for a page called "foo", it'll try to :
- Find a controller action in the following order.
App\Http\Controllers\Wp\Page\Foo@index
.App\Http\Controllers\Wp\Page@index
.
- If no controller action found, try to find a view file in the following order (if any, pass the
$post
object as the view data).<ViewRootDir>/wp/page/foo.blade.php
.<ViewRootDir>/wp/page.blade.php
.
As you can see, the searching paths will follow the hierarchy of the queried object.
In the above example queried object is the page foo
. Same rule will be applied to taxonomy or post archive Etc.
If Laraish could resolve the route, it'll passes some default view data according to the type of queried object :
- page
$post
- post archive
$posts
- taxonomy archive
$term
$posts
- home
$post
if it's a "frontpage", otherwise$posts
Where $post
is a Post model object, and $posts
is a Laraish\Support\Wp\Query\QueryResults
object contains a collection of posts.
By default, the post model will be Laraish\Support\Wp\Model\Post
, but it'll try to locate a custom model in \App\Models\Wp\Post
first.
For example, if the queried object is a custom post type "movie", it will try to use \App\Models\Wp\Post\Movie
if such a class found.
Same rule applied to the taxonomy too, but the searching path will be \App\Models\Wp\Taxonomy
instead.
Notice that if you want to use template for pages or posts, you should register them in theme.php.
Not only in the route file, you could also use the resolveView
method in the controller to let Laraish resolve the view file automatically.
Here is an example shows how you can use utilize the resolveView
in a controller.
In the routes/wp.php
file :
use App\Http\Controllers\Wp\Page;
use Laraish\Support\Facades\WpRoute;
WpRoute::page([Page::class, 'index']);
In the controller :
namespace App\Http\Controllers\Wp;
use App\Http\Controllers\Controller;
class Page extends Controller
{
public function index()
{
$data = [ 'foo' => 'bar' ];
// Let Laraish figure out the view file.
// 'wp.page' is the default view if no matched view found.
return $this->resolveView('wp.page', $data);
}
}
In the above example, if the coming request is for a page called "foo", it'll try to find a view file from the following paths:
<ViewRootDir>/wp/page/foo.blade.php
.<ViewRootDir>/wp/page.blade.php
.
Alone with the WordPress routes, you can even write your own routes by URI, and it just works.
Just be careful do not write regular routes to the routes/wp.php
file ( technically you could, but I would not recommend ).
For instance, write them to the routes/web.php
file.
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Route;
// This will use the original UriValidator of Laravel.
Route::get('/my/endpoint', function () {
return 'Magic!';
});
Keep in mind that routes in routes/wp.php
has the lowest priority of all the routes in the routes
directory.
Laraish comes with some general purpose models like Post
or Term
model. Note that they are not an implementation of ORM like the Laravel's Eloquent Model. They are just a simple wrapper for WordPress's APIs that encapsulate some common logic to help you simplify your business logic.
You can find those models in Laraish\Support\Wp\Model
. Because the Post
model is the most frequently used model, for convenience, a Post
Class that extends the Laraish\Support\Wp\Model\Post
has brought to your app/Models
directory already.
Let's take a look at an example.
Say you have a route like this :
WpRoute::archive('\App\Http\Controllers\Wp\Archive@index');
In your controller app\Http\Controllers\Wp\Archive
:
<?php
namespace App\Http\Controllers\Wp;
use App\Http\Controllers\Controller;
use App\Models\Post;
class Archive extends Controller
{
public function index()
{
$data = [
'posts' => Post::queriedPosts() // get the posts for current page
];
return $this->view('wp.archive', $data);
}
}
In your view wp.archive
:
<main class="posts">
@foreach($posts as $post)
<section class="post">
<a class="post" href="{{ $post->permalink }}">
<img class="post__thumbnail" src="{{ $post->thumbnail->url }}" alt="{{ $post->title }}">
</a>
<time class="post__time" datetime="{{ $post->dateTime }}">{{ $post->date }}</time>
<a class="post__category" href="{{ $post->category->url }}">{{ $post->category->name }}</a>
<h1 class="post__title">{{ $post->title }}</h1>
</section>
@endforeach
{{ $posts->getPagination() }}
</main>
As you can see in the example above, you can get common properties of a post, like $post->permalink
or $post->title
etc.
Actually, those properties
are not "real properties". When you access property like $post->permalink
, under the hood, it'll call $post->permalink()
to get the value for you automatically, and from the second time when you access the same property, it won't call $post->permalink()
again, instead, it'll return the cached value from previous calling result. If you don't want to use cached value, you can call the method explicitly like $post->title()
.
Also, feel free to create your own "properties" by adding public methods to your model class.
Take a look at Laraish\Support\Wp\Model, there are some predefined "properties" that you may want to use.
As I mentioned earlier, models that comes with Laraish are not real models.
If you want to cast a "model" to JSON, you must specify the attributes you want output in the $visible
property.
For example:
<?php
namespace App\Models;
use Laraish\Support\Wp\Model\Post as BaseModel;
class Post extends BaseModel
{
protected $visible = [
'title',
'thumbnail',
'content'
];
}
Now you can call $post->toJson()
to get the serialized json string of the post object.
Laraish also added a @loop
blade directive for simplifying "The Loop" in WordPress.
for example:
@loop($posts as $post)
{{ get_the_title() }}
@endloop
will be compiled to
<?php foreach($posts as $post): setup_the_post( $post->wpPost ); ?>
<?php echo e(get_the_title()); ?>
<?php endforeach; wp_reset_postdata(); ?>
where $post
should be a Post
model object.
Usually you don't want to use the @loop
directive. Because it'll introduce some unnecessary overheads. Keep in mind that always prefer @foreach
to @loop
. Except you want to access some properties like content
or excerpt
which requiring must be retrieved within "The Loop", otherwise never use the @loop
actively.
Setup the custom post type, register the navigation menus ... There always are some common tasks you have to deal with when you start to build a WordPress theme. The app/config/theme.php
is where you define all your common tasks.
Some basic options are predefined for you. Take a look at the config/theme.php.
Also, you can create your own options by adding new static methods to the App\Providers\ThemeOptionsProvider
. The name of the method will become to an option.
You define your actions and filters in App\Providers\EventServiceProvider
just like the laravel's event.
The following example adding a pre_get_posts
action, and the handle
method of App\Listeners\MainQueryListener
will be called for this action.
<?php
namespace App\Providers;
use Laraish\Foundation\Support\Providers\EventServiceProvider as ServiceProvider;
class EventServiceProvider extends ServiceProvider
{
/**
* Register the WordPress actions
* @var array
*/
protected $action = [
'pre_get_posts' => 'App\Listeners\MainQueryListener'
];
/**
* Register the WordPress filters
* @var array
*/
protected $filter = [];
}
You can get the pagination by calling the getPagination
method of Post
.
use App\Models\Post;
$posts = Post::queriedPosts();
<div>{{ $posts->getPagination() }}</div>
By providing additional parameters, you can specify the view file and several options. See laraish/pagination for more details.
The model classes comes with Laraish works seamlessly with ACF out of the box.
For example, suppose that you have created a custom field with ACF named foobar
. Then you can access the field's value like this:
use App\Models\Post;
$post = new Post(123);
// As with the `Post` model, these models works the same way.
// `Laraish\Support\Wp\Model\User`
// `Laraish\Support\Wp\Model\Term`
// This make it call the magic method to get the value of the custom field `foobar`.
$foobar = $post->foobar;
You can determine if or not or how to cast the data type retrieved from ACF at config/theme.php
.
The default behavior is casting any of these types to Laraish's model:
WP_Post
→Laraish\Support\Wp\Model\Post
WP_User
→Laraish\Support\Wp\Model\User
WP_Term
→Laraish\Support\Wp\Model\Term
Additionally, casting any assoc array to stdClass
.
Laraish comes with a middleware app/Http/Middleware/ShareViewData.php
. This is your best place to define any shared view data or view composers.
Perhaps creating options pages is one of the most tedious tasks. If you've used the WordPress's API to create options pages, you know how dirty the code is going to be…
Laraish provides a powerful and yet clean API to help you creating the options pages.
See laraish/options for more details.
Sometimes, you just want to get some basic information about the current view(page) being displayed. For example, the path of the view file, or the name of the controller that was used.
To get the basic information of the current view being displayed, you include the ViewDebbuger
trait in your App\Http\Controllers
.
Make sure you have called wp_footer()
in your view, then open your console of your browser, and you could find something like this:
{
"view_path": "/var/www/example/wp-content/themes/example/resources/views/singular/news.blade.php",
"compiled_path": "/var/www/example/wp-content/themes/example/storage/framework/views/befa3e2a2cb93be21c6ebf30a60824a5d2a2ed11.php",
"data": {
"post": {}
},
"controller": "App\\Http\\Controllers\\Singular\\News"
}
Note that when APP_ENV=production
is set in your .env
file, nothing will be outputted to the console.
As I mentioned in the Installation section. To run an artisan command, you have to meet the following conditions.
- The MySQL server and the web server must be running.
- If you are on Mac and use MAMP or similar application to create your local server environment you may need to change your
$PATH
environment variable to make Composer use the PHP binary that MAMP provides rather than the OS's built-in PHP binary.
Notice that Laraish is just a regular WordPress theme. Therefore, not only the public
directory but all the files and directories inside the theme are accessible from outside.
Laraish comes with two .htaccess
files to deny any accesses against any files and directories inside the theme except the following files:
style.css
screenshot.png
public/**
If you don't use Apache, you should have your server software configured to have the same access control just like the above one.
If you have a plugin using Composer, and that plugin has the same dependency as your theme(Laraish) has, may lead to a problem when they are using a different version of that dependency.
In such a situation, it'll require
multiple Composer Autoloaders(vendor/autoload.php
), and the last loaded one will take priority over the previous ones.
Say you have a plugin that depends on the package Foo (v1.2.0)
, and your theme depends on the same package Foo (v2.0.1)
; such a situation may lead to load the unintended version of Foo
. Which version will be used depend on the time the autoloader.php
was loaded and the time the package(class) was used.
Being that said, this is not a Composer specific issue. I'd say it's a WordPress issue that needs to be solved somehow.
Here are some articles discussing this issue in WordPress.
- A Narrative of Using Composer in a WordPress Plugin
- PHP Scoper: How to Avoid Namespace Issues in your Composer Dependencies
If you are planing to publish this theme for general use, make sure you have your theme namespaced by using tools like PHP Scoper.