In other frameworks, pagination can be very painful. Laravel makes it a breeze. Laravel can quickly generate an intelligent "range" of links based on the current page, and the generated HTML is compatible with the Bootstrap CSS framework.
There are several ways to paginate items. The simplest is by using the paginate
method on the query builder or an Eloquent query. The paginate
method provided by Laravel automatically takes care of setting the proper limit and offset based on the current page being viewed by the user. By default, the current page is detected by the value of the ?page
query string argument on the HTTP request. Of course, this value is automatically detected by Laravel, and is also automatically inserted into links generated by the paginator.
First, let's take a look at calling the paginate
method on a query. In this example, the only argument passed to paginate
is the number of items you would like displayed "per page". In this case, let's specify that we would like to display 15
items per page:
<?php
namespace App\Http\Controllers;
use DB;
use App\Http\Controllers\Controller;
class UserController extends Controller
{
/**
* Show all of the users for the application.
*
* @return Response
*/
public function index()
{
$users = DB::table('users')->paginate(15);
return view('user.index', ['users' => $users]);
}
}
Note: Currently, pagination operations that use a
groupBy
statement cannot be executed efficiently by Laravel. If you need to use agroupBy
with a paginated result set, it is recommended that you query the database and create a paginator manually.
If you only need to display simple "Next" and "Previous" links in your pagination view, you have the option of using the simplePaginate
method to perform a more efficient query. This is very useful for large datasets if you do not need to display a link for each page number when rendering your view:
$users = DB::table('users')->simplePaginate(15);
You may also paginate Eloquent queries. In this example, we will paginate the User
model with 15
items per page. As you can see, the syntax is nearly identical to paginating query builder results:
$users = App\User::paginate(15);
Of course, you may call paginate
after setting other constraints on the query, such as where
clauses:
$users = User::where('votes', '>', 100)->paginate(15);
You may also use the simplePaginate
method when paginating Eloquent models:
$users = User::where('votes', '>', 100)->simplePaginate(15);
Sometimes you may wish to create a pagination instance manually, passing it an array of items. You may do so by creating either an Illuminate\Pagination\Paginator
or Illuminate\Pagination\LengthAwarePaginator
instance, depending on your needs.
The Paginator
class does not need to know the total number of items in the result set; however, because of this, the class does not have methods for retrieve the index of the last page. The LengthAwarePaginator
accepts almost the same arguments as the Paginator
; however, it does require a count of the total number of items in the result set.
In other words, the Paginator
corresponds to the simplePaginate
method on the query builder and Eloquent, while the LengthAwarePaginator
corresponds to the paginate
method.
When manually creating a paginator instance, you should manually "slice" the array of results you pass to the paginator. If you're unsure how to do this, check out the array_slice PHP function.
When you call the paginate
or simplePaginate
methods on a query builder or Eloquent query, you will receive a paginator instance. When calling the paginate
method, you will receive an instance of Illuminate\Pagination\LengthAwarePaginator
. When calling the simplePaginate
method, you will receive an instance of Illuminate\Pagination\Paginator
. These objects provide several methods that describe the result set. In addition to these helpers methods, the paginator instances are iterators and may be looped as an array.
So, once you have retrieved the results, you may display the results and render the page links using Blade:
<div class="container">
@foreach ($users as $user)
{{ $user->name }}
@endforeach
</div>
{!! $users->render() !!}
The render
method will render the links to the rest of the pages in the result set. Each of these links will already contain the proper ?page
query string variable. Remember, the HTML generated by the render
method is compatible with the Bootstrap CSS framework.
Note: When calling the
render
method from a Blade template, be sure to use the{!! !!}
echo syntax so the HTML links will not be escaped.
The setPath
method allows you to customize the URI used by the paginator when generating links. For example, if you want the paginator to generate links like http://example.com/custom/url?page=N
, you should pass custom/url
to the setPath
method:
Route::get('users', function () {
$users = App\User::paginate(15);
$users->setPath('custom/url');
//
});
You may add to the query string of pagination links using the appends
method. For example, to append &sort=votes
to each pagination link, you should make the following call to appends
:
{!! $users->appends(['sort' => 'votes'])->render() !!}
If you wish to append a "hash fragment" to the paginator's URLs, you may use the fragment
method. For example, to append #foo
to the end of each pagination link, make the following call to the fragment
method:
{!! $users->fragment('foo')->render() !!}
You may also access additional pagination information via the following methods on paginator instances:
$results->count()
$results->currentPage()
$results->hasMorePages()
$results->lastPage() (Not available when using simplePaginate)
$results->nextPageUrl()
$results->perPage()
$results->total() (Not available when using simplePaginate)
$results->url($page)
The Laravel paginator result classes implement the Illuminate\Contracts\Support\JsonableInterface
contract and expose the toJson
method, so it's very easy to convert your pagination results to JSON.
You may also convert a paginator instance to JSON by simply returning it from a route or controller action:
Route::get('users', function () {
return App\User::paginate();
});
The JSON from the paginator will include meta information such as total
, current_page
, last_page
, and more. The actual result objects will be available via the data
key in the JSON array. Here is an example of the JSON created by returning a paginator instance from a route:
{
"total": 50,
"per_page": 15,
"current_page": 1,
"last_page": 4,
"next_page_url": "http://laravel.app?page=2",
"prev_page_url": null,
"from": 1,
"to": 15,
"data":[
{
// Result Object
},
{
// Result Object
}
]
}