Right now, it is possible to get the Posts
by first getting the User
then using that ID, getting the Posts
. Note: this is not the recommended way of using Laravel with relationships:
$user = User::find($id);
$posts = Post::where("user_id", "=", $user->id)->get();
While this would work (assuming you had a model for Post
with a user_id
key), but the correct way is to define the relationship in the models. For this one, it would be hasMany()
and belongsTo()
on User
and Post
respectfully. Here is your User.php
model class:
class User extends Eloquent {
protected $table = "users";
public function posts(){
return $this->hasMany("Post");
}
}
And make sure to define the inverse in your Post.php
model class:
class Post extends Eloquent {
protected $table = "posts";
public function user(){
return $this->belongsTo("User");
}
}
Lastly, you can query this relationship in your controller using the following:
$user = User::find($id);
$posts = $user->posts()->get();
This will also enforce integrity by forcing any updates/saves to use the right user_id
key. There's some pretty extensive documentation on how to use the Eloquent
style of database querying, check it out here:
Laravel - Eloquent
Hope that helps!
Edit
To pass this to a view, add the following to your controller:
public function view_post($id){
$user = User::find($id);
$posts = $user->posts()->get();
return View::make("view")->with(array("user" => $user, "posts" => $posts));
}
You will need a file in your app/views
directory named (in this case) view.blade.php
which "echos" all the information about the user and the posts:
<h2>User: {{ $user->id }} - {{ $user->email }}</h2>
<br/>
<h2>Posts:</h2>
@foreach($posts AS $post)
<p> {{ $post->id }}: {{ $post->content }}</p>
@endforeach
Etc etc. Note, I have no idea what columns your users
and posts
table has, but using $user->column
or $post->column
will echo the contents of that named column.
Here's the documentation for Views and Responses
, which would help you with this issue:
Laravel - Views and Responses