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783 lines
26 KiB
Markdown
783 lines
26 KiB
Markdown
Data widgets
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============
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Yii provides a set of [widgets](structure-widgets.md) that can be used to display data.
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While the [DetailView](#detail-view) widget can be used to display data for a single record,
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[ListView](#list-view) and [GridView](#grid-view) can be used to display a list or table of data records
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providing features like pagination, sorting and filtering.
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DetailView <span id="detail-view"></span>
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----------
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The [[yii\widgets\DetailView|DetailView]] widget displays the details of a single data [[yii\widgets\DetailView::$model|model]].
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It is best used for displaying a model in a regular format (e.g. each model attribute is displayed as a row in a table).
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The model can be either an instance or subclass of [[\yii\base\Model]] such as an [active record](db-active-record.md) or an associative array.
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DetailView uses the [[yii\widgets\DetailView::$attributes|$attributes]] property to determine which model attributes should be displayed and how they
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should be formatted. See the [formatter section](output-formatting.md) for available formatting options.
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A typical usage of DetailView is as follows:
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```php
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echo DetailView::widget([
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'model' => $model,
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'attributes' => [
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'title', // title attribute (in plain text)
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'description:html', // description attribute formatted as HTML
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[ // the owner name of the model
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'label' => 'Owner',
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'value' => $model->owner->name,
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'contentOptions' => ['class' => 'bg-red'], // HTML attributes to customize value tag
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'captionOptions' => ['tooltip' => 'Tooltip'], // HTML attributes to customize label tag
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],
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'created_at:datetime', // creation date formatted as datetime
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],
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]);
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```
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Remember that unlike [[yii\widgets\GridView|GridView]] which processes a set of models,
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[[yii\widgets\DetailView|DetailView]] processes just one. So most of the time there is no need for using closure since
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`$model` is the only one model for display and available in view as a variable.
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However some cases can make using of closure useful. For example when `visible` is specified and you want to prevent
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`value` calculations in case it evaluates to `false`:
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```php
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echo DetailView::widget([
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'model' => $model,
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'attributes' => [
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[
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'attribute' => 'owner',
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'value' => function ($model) {
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return $model->owner->name;
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},
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'visible' => \Yii::$app->user->can('posts.owner.view'),
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],
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],
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]);
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```
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ListView <span id="list-view"></span>
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--------
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The [[yii\widgets\ListView|ListView]] widget is used to display data from a [data provider](output-data-providers.md).
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Each data model is rendered using the specified [[yii\widgets\ListView::$itemView|view file]].
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Since it provides features such as pagination, sorting and filtering out of the box, it is handy both to display
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information to end user and to create data managing UI.
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A typical usage is as follows:
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```php
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use yii\widgets\ListView;
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use yii\data\ActiveDataProvider;
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$dataProvider = new ActiveDataProvider([
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'query' => Post::find(),
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'pagination' => [
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'pageSize' => 20,
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],
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]);
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echo ListView::widget([
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'dataProvider' => $dataProvider,
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'itemView' => '_post',
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]);
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```
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The `_post` view file could contain the following:
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```php
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<?php
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use yii\helpers\Html;
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use yii\helpers\HtmlPurifier;
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?>
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<div class="post">
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<h2><?= Html::encode($model->title) ?></h2>
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<?= HtmlPurifier::process($model->text) ?>
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</div>
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```
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In the view file above, the current data model is available as `$model`. Additionally the following variables are available:
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- `$key`: mixed, the key value associated with the data item.
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- `$index`: integer, the zero-based index of the data item in the items array returned by the data provider.
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- `$widget`: ListView, this widget instance.
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If you need to pass additional data to each view, you can use the [[yii\widgets\ListView::$viewParams|$viewParams]] property
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to pass key value pairs like the following:
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```php
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echo ListView::widget([
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'dataProvider' => $dataProvider,
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'itemView' => '_post',
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'viewParams' => [
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'fullView' => true,
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'context' => 'main-page',
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// ...
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],
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]);
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```
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These are then also available as variables in the view.
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GridView <span id="grid-view"></span>
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--------
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Data grid or [[yii\grid\GridView|GridView]] is one of the most powerful Yii widgets. It is extremely useful if you need to quickly build the admin
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section of the system. It takes data from a [data provider](output-data-providers.md) and renders each row using a set of [[yii\grid\GridView::columns|columns]]
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presenting data in the form of a table.
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Each row of the table represents the data of a single data item, and a column usually represents an attribute of
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the item (some columns may correspond to complex expressions of attributes or static text).
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The minimal code needed to use GridView is as follows:
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```php
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use yii\grid\GridView;
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use yii\data\ActiveDataProvider;
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$dataProvider = new ActiveDataProvider([
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'query' => Post::find(),
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'pagination' => [
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'pageSize' => 20,
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],
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]);
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echo GridView::widget([
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'dataProvider' => $dataProvider,
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]);
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```
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The above code first creates a data provider and then uses GridView to display every attribute in every row taken from
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the data provider. The displayed table is equipped with sorting and pagination functionality out of the box.
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### Grid columns <span id="grid-columns"></span>
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The columns of the grid table are configured in terms of [[yii\grid\Column]] classes, which are
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configured in the [[yii\grid\GridView::columns|columns]] property of GridView configuration.
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Depending on column type and settings these are able to present data differently.
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The default class is [[yii\grid\DataColumn]], which represents a model attribute and can be sorted and filtered by.
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```php
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echo GridView::widget([
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'dataProvider' => $dataProvider,
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'columns' => [
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['class' => 'yii\grid\SerialColumn'],
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// Simple columns defined by the data contained in $dataProvider.
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// Data from the model's column will be used.
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'id',
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'username',
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// More complex one.
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[
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'class' => 'yii\grid\DataColumn', // can be omitted, as it is the default
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'value' => function ($data) {
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return $data->name; // $data['name'] for array data, e.g. using SqlDataProvider.
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},
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],
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],
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]);
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```
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Note that if the [[yii\grid\GridView::columns|columns]] part of the configuration isn't specified,
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Yii tries to show all possible columns of the data provider's model.
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### Column classes <span id="column-classes"></span>
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Grid columns could be customized by using different column classes:
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```php
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echo GridView::widget([
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'dataProvider' => $dataProvider,
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'columns' => [
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[
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'class' => 'yii\grid\SerialColumn', // <-- here
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// you may configure additional properties here
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],
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```
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In addition to column classes provided by Yii that we'll review below, you can create your own column classes.
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Each column class extends from [[yii\grid\Column]] so that there are some common options you can set while configuring
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grid columns.
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- [[yii\grid\Column::header|header]] allows to set content for header row.
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- [[yii\grid\Column::footer|footer]] allows to set content for footer row.
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- [[yii\grid\Column::visible|visible]] defines if the column should be visible.
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- [[yii\grid\Column::content|content]] allows you to pass a valid PHP callback that will return data for a row. The format is the following:
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```php
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function ($model, $key, $index, $column) {
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return 'a string';
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}
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```
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You may specify various container HTML options by passing arrays to:
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- [[yii\grid\Column::headerOptions|headerOptions]]
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- [[yii\grid\Column::footerOptions|footerOptions]]
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- [[yii\grid\Column::filterOptions|filterOptions]]
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- [[yii\grid\Column::contentOptions|contentOptions]]
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#### Data column <span id="data-column"></span>
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[[yii\grid\DataColumn|Data column]] is used for displaying and sorting data. It is the default column type so the specifying class could be omitted when
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using it.
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The main setting of the data column is its [[yii\grid\DataColumn::format|format]] property. Its values
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correspond to methods in the `formatter` [application component](structure-application-components.md) that is [[\yii\i18n\Formatter|Formatter]] by default:
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```php
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echo GridView::widget([
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'columns' => [
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[
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'attribute' => 'name',
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'format' => 'text'
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],
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[
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'attribute' => 'birthday',
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'format' => ['date', 'php:Y-m-d']
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],
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'created_at:datetime', // shortcut format
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[
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'label' => 'Education',
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'attribute' => 'education',
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'filter' => ['0' => 'Elementary', '1' => 'Secondary', '2' => 'Higher'],
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'filterInputOptions' => ['prompt' => 'All educations', 'class' => 'form-control', 'id' => null]
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],
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],
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]);
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```
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In the above, `text` corresponds to [[\yii\i18n\Formatter::asText()]]. The value of the column is passed as the first
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argument. In the second column definition, `date` corresponds to [[\yii\i18n\Formatter::asDate()]]. The value of the
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column is, again, passed as the first argument while 'php:Y-m-d' is used as the second argument value.
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For a list of available formatters see the [section about Data Formatting](output-formatting.md).
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For configuring data columns there is also a shortcut format which is described in the
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API documentation for [[yii\grid\GridView::columns|columns]].
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Use [[yii\grid\DataColumn::filter|filter]] and [[yii\grid\DataColumn::filterInputOptions|filterInputOptions]] to
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control HTML for the filter input.
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By default, column headers are rendered by [[yii\data\Sort::link]]. It could be adjusted using [[yii\grid\Column::header]].
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To change header text you should set [[yii\grid\DataColumn::$label]] like in the example above.
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By default the label will be populated from data model. For more details see [[yii\grid\DataColumn::getHeaderCellLabel]].
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#### Action column <span id="action-column"></span>
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[[yii\grid\ActionColumn|Action column]] displays action buttons such as update or delete for each row.
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```php
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echo GridView::widget([
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'dataProvider' => $dataProvider,
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'columns' => [
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[
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'class' => 'yii\grid\ActionColumn',
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// you may configure additional properties here
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],
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```
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Available properties you can configure are:
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- [[yii\grid\ActionColumn::controller|controller]] is the ID of the controller that should handle the actions. If not set, it will use the currently active
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controller.
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- [[yii\grid\ActionColumn::template|template]] defines the template used for composing each cell in the action column. Tokens enclosed within curly brackets are
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treated as controller action IDs (also called *button names* in the context of action column). They will be replaced
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by the corresponding button rendering callbacks specified in [[yii\grid\ActionColumn::$buttons|buttons]]. For example, the token `{view}` will be
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replaced by the result of the callback `buttons['view']`. If a callback cannot be found, the token will be replaced
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with an empty string. The default tokens are `{view} {update} {delete}`.
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- [[yii\grid\ActionColumn::buttons|buttons]] is an array of button rendering callbacks. The array keys are the button names (without curly brackets),
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and the values are the corresponding button rendering callbacks. The callbacks should use the following signature:
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```php
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function ($url, $model, $key) {
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// return the button HTML code
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}
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```
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In the code above, `$url` is the URL that the column creates for the button, `$model` is the model object being
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rendered for the current row, and `$key` is the key of the model in the data provider array.
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- [[yii\grid\ActionColumn::urlCreator|urlCreator]] is a callback that creates a button URL using the specified model information. The signature of
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the callback should be the same as that of [[yii\grid\ActionColumn::createUrl()]]. If this property is not set,
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button URLs will be created using [[yii\grid\ActionColumn::createUrl()]].
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- [[yii\grid\ActionColumn::visibleButtons|visibleButtons]] is an array of visibility conditions for each button.
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The array keys are the button names (without curly brackets), and the values are the boolean `true`/`false` or the
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anonymous function. When the button name is not specified in this array it will be shown by default.
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The callbacks must use the following signature:
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```php
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function ($model, $key, $index) {
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return $model->status === 'editable';
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}
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```
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Or you can pass a boolean value:
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```php
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[
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'update' => \Yii::$app->user->can('update')
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]
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```
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#### Checkbox column <span id="checkbox-column"></span>
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[[yii\grid\CheckboxColumn|Checkbox column]] displays a column of checkboxes.
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To add a CheckboxColumn to the GridView, add it to the [[yii\grid\GridView::$columns|columns]] configuration as follows:
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```php
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echo GridView::widget([
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'id' => 'grid',
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'dataProvider' => $dataProvider,
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'columns' => [
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// ...
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[
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'class' => 'yii\grid\CheckboxColumn',
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// you may configure additional properties here
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],
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],
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```
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Users may click on the checkboxes to select rows of the grid. The selected rows may be obtained by calling the following
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JavaScript code:
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```javascript
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var keys = $('#grid').yiiGridView('getSelectedRows');
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// keys is an array consisting of the keys associated with the selected rows
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```
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#### Serial column <span id="serial-column"></span>
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[[yii\grid\SerialColumn|Serial column]] renders row numbers starting with `1` and going forward.
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Usage is as simple as the following:
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```php
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echo GridView::widget([
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'dataProvider' => $dataProvider,
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'columns' => [
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['class' => 'yii\grid\SerialColumn'], // <-- here
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// ...
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```
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### Sorting data <span id="sorting-data"></span>
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> Note: This section is under development.
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>
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> - https://github.com/yiisoft/yii2/issues/1576
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### Filtering data <span id="filtering-data"></span>
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For filtering data, the GridView needs a [model](structure-models.md) that represents the search criteria which is
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usually taken from the filter fields in the GridView table.
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A common practice when using [active records](db-active-record.md) is to create a search Model class
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that provides needed functionality (it can be generated for you by [Gii](start-gii.md)). This class defines the validation
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rules to show filter controls on the GridView table and to provide a `search()` method that will return the data
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provider with an adjusted query that processes the search criteria.
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To add the search capability for the `Post` model, we can create a `PostSearch` model like the following example:
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```php
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<?php
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namespace app\models;
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use Yii;
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use yii\base\Model;
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use yii\data\ActiveDataProvider;
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class PostSearch extends Post
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{
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public function rules()
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{
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// only fields in rules() are searchable
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return [
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[['id'], 'integer'],
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[['title', 'creation_date'], 'safe'],
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];
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}
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public function scenarios()
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{
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// bypass scenarios() implementation in the parent class
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return Model::scenarios();
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}
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public function search($params)
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{
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$query = Post::find();
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$dataProvider = new ActiveDataProvider([
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'query' => $query,
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]);
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// load the search form data and validate
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if (!($this->load($params) && $this->validate())) {
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return $dataProvider;
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}
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// adjust the query by adding the filters
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$query->andFilterWhere(['id' => $this->id]);
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$query->andFilterWhere(['like', 'title', $this->title])
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->andFilterWhere(['like', 'creation_date', $this->creation_date]);
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return $dataProvider;
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}
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}
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```
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> Tip: See [Query Builder](db-query-builder.md) and especially [Filter Conditions](db-query-builder.md#filter-conditions)
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> to learn how to build filtering query.
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You can use this function in the controller to get the dataProvider for the GridView:
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```php
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$searchModel = new PostSearch();
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$dataProvider = $searchModel->search(Yii::$app->request->get());
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return $this->render('myview', [
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'dataProvider' => $dataProvider,
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'searchModel' => $searchModel,
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]);
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```
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And in the view you then assign the `$dataProvider` and `$searchModel` to the GridView:
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```php
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echo GridView::widget([
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'dataProvider' => $dataProvider,
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'filterModel' => $searchModel,
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'columns' => [
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// ...
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],
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]);
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```
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### Separate filter form <span id="separate-filter-form"></span>
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Most of the time using GridView header filters is enough, but in case you need a separate filter form,
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you can easily add it as well. You can create partial view `_search.php` with the following contents:
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```php
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<?php
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use yii\helpers\Html;
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use yii\widgets\ActiveForm;
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/**
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* @var \yii\web\View $this
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* @var \app\models\PostSearch $model
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* @var \yii\widgets\ActiveForm $form
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*/
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?>
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<div class="post-search">
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<?php $form = ActiveForm::begin([
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'action' => ['index'],
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'method' => 'get',
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]); ?>
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<?= $form->field($model, 'title') ?>
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<?= $form->field($model, 'creation_date') ?>
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<div class="form-group">
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<?= Html::submitButton('Search', ['class' => 'btn btn-primary']) ?>
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<?= Html::submitButton('Reset', ['class' => 'btn btn-default']) ?>
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</div>
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<?php ActiveForm::end(); ?>
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</div>
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```
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and include it in `index.php` view like so:
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```php
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<?= $this->render('_search', ['model' => $searchModel]) ?>
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```
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> Note: if you use Gii to generate CRUD code, the separate filter form (`_search.php`) is generated by default,
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but is commented in `index.php` view. Uncomment it and it's ready to use!
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Separate filter form is useful when you need to filter by fields, that are not displayed in GridView
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|
or for special filtering conditions, like date range. For filtering by date range we can add non DB attributes
|
|
`createdFrom` and `createdTo` to the search model:
|
|
|
|
```php
|
|
class PostSearch extends Post
|
|
{
|
|
/**
|
|
* @var string
|
|
*/
|
|
public $createdFrom;
|
|
|
|
/**
|
|
* @var string
|
|
*/
|
|
public $createdTo;
|
|
}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Extend query conditions in the `search()` method like so:
|
|
|
|
```php
|
|
$query->andFilterWhere(['>=', 'creation_date', $this->createdFrom])
|
|
->andFilterWhere(['<=', 'creation_date', $this->createdTo]);
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
And add the representative fields to the filter form:
|
|
|
|
```php
|
|
<?= $form->field($model, 'creationFrom') ?>
|
|
|
|
<?= $form->field($model, 'creationTo') ?>
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
### Working with model relations <span id="working-with-model-relations"></span>
|
|
|
|
When displaying active records in a GridView you might encounter the case where you display values of related
|
|
columns such as the post author's name instead of just his `id`.
|
|
You do this by defining the attribute name in [[yii\grid\GridView::$columns]] as `author.name` when the `Post` model
|
|
has a relation named `author` and the author model has an attribute `name`.
|
|
The GridView will then display the name of the author but sorting and filtering are not enabled by default.
|
|
You have to adjust the `PostSearch` model that has been introduced in the last section to add this functionality.
|
|
|
|
To enable sorting on a related column you have to join the related table and add the sorting rule
|
|
to the Sort component of the data provider:
|
|
|
|
```php
|
|
$query = Post::find();
|
|
$dataProvider = new ActiveDataProvider([
|
|
'query' => $query,
|
|
]);
|
|
|
|
// join with relation `author` that is a relation to the table `users`
|
|
// and set the table alias to be `author`
|
|
$query->joinWith(['author' => function($query) { $query->from(['author' => 'users']); }]);
|
|
// since version 2.0.7, the above line can be simplified to $query->joinWith('author AS author');
|
|
// enable sorting for the related column
|
|
$dataProvider->sort->attributes['author.name'] = [
|
|
'asc' => ['author.name' => SORT_ASC],
|
|
'desc' => ['author.name' => SORT_DESC],
|
|
];
|
|
|
|
// ...
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Filtering also needs the joinWith call as above. You also need to define the searchable column in attributes and rules like this:
|
|
|
|
```php
|
|
public function attributes()
|
|
{
|
|
// add related fields to searchable attributes
|
|
return array_merge(parent::attributes(), ['author.name']);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
public function rules()
|
|
{
|
|
return [
|
|
[['id'], 'integer'],
|
|
[['title', 'creation_date', 'author.name'], 'safe'],
|
|
];
|
|
}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
In `search()` you then just add another filter condition with:
|
|
|
|
```php
|
|
$query->andFilterWhere(['LIKE', 'author.name', $this->getAttribute('author.name')]);
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
> Info: In the above we use the same string for the relation name and the table alias; however, when your alias and relation name
|
|
> differ, you have to pay attention to where you use the alias and where you use the relation name.
|
|
> A simple rule for this is to use the alias in every place that is used to build the database query and the
|
|
> relation name in all other definitions such as `attributes()` and `rules()` etc.
|
|
>
|
|
> For example, if you use the alias `au` for the author relation table, the joinWith statement looks like the following:
|
|
>
|
|
> ```php
|
|
> $query->joinWith(['author au']);
|
|
> ```
|
|
>
|
|
> It is also possible to just call `$query->joinWith(['author']);` when the alias is defined in the relation definition.
|
|
>
|
|
> The alias has to be used in the filter condition but the attribute name stays the same:
|
|
>
|
|
> ```php
|
|
> $query->andFilterWhere(['LIKE', 'au.name', $this->getAttribute('author.name')]);
|
|
> ```
|
|
>
|
|
> The same is true for the sorting definition:
|
|
>
|
|
> ```php
|
|
> $dataProvider->sort->attributes['author.name'] = [
|
|
> 'asc' => ['au.name' => SORT_ASC],
|
|
> 'desc' => ['au.name' => SORT_DESC],
|
|
> ];
|
|
> ```
|
|
>
|
|
> Also, when specifying the [[yii\data\Sort::defaultOrder|defaultOrder]] for sorting, you need to use the relation name
|
|
> instead of the alias:
|
|
>
|
|
> ```php
|
|
> $dataProvider->sort->defaultOrder = ['author.name' => SORT_ASC];
|
|
> ```
|
|
|
|
> Info: For more information on `joinWith` and the queries performed in the background, check the
|
|
> [active record docs on joining with relations](db-active-record.md#joining-with-relations).
|
|
|
|
#### Using SQL views for filtering, sorting and displaying data <span id="using-sql-views"></span>
|
|
|
|
There is also another approach that can be faster and more useful - SQL views. For example, if we need to show the gridview
|
|
with users and their profiles, we can do so in this way:
|
|
|
|
```sql
|
|
CREATE OR REPLACE VIEW vw_user_info AS
|
|
SELECT user.*, user_profile.lastname, user_profile.firstname
|
|
FROM user, user_profile
|
|
WHERE user.id = user_profile.user_id
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Then you need to create the ActiveRecord that will be representing this view:
|
|
|
|
```php
|
|
|
|
namespace app\models\views\grid;
|
|
|
|
use yii\db\ActiveRecord;
|
|
|
|
class UserView extends ActiveRecord
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
/**
|
|
* {@inheritdoc}
|
|
*/
|
|
public static function tableName()
|
|
{
|
|
return 'vw_user_info';
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
public static function primaryKey()
|
|
{
|
|
return ['id'];
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/**
|
|
* {@inheritdoc}
|
|
*/
|
|
public function rules()
|
|
{
|
|
return [
|
|
// define here your rules
|
|
];
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/**
|
|
* {@inheritdoc}
|
|
*/
|
|
public function attributeLabels()
|
|
{
|
|
return [
|
|
// define here your attribute labels
|
|
];
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
After that you can use this UserView active record with search models, without additional specification of sorting and filtering attributes.
|
|
All attributes will be working out of the box. Note that this approach has several pros and cons:
|
|
|
|
- you don't need to specify different sorting and filtering conditions. Everything works out of the box;
|
|
- it can be much faster because of the data size, count of sql queries performed (for each relation you will not need any additional query);
|
|
- since this is just a simple mapping UI on the sql view it lacks some domain logic that is in your entities, so if you have some methods like `isActive`,
|
|
`isDeleted` or others that will influence the UI, you will need to duplicate them in this class too.
|
|
|
|
|
|
### Multiple GridViews on one page <span id="multiple-gridviews"></span>
|
|
|
|
You can use more than one GridView on a single page but some additional configuration is needed so that
|
|
they do not interfere with each other.
|
|
When using multiple instances of GridView you have to configure different parameter names for
|
|
the generated sort and pagination links so that each GridView has its own individual sorting and pagination.
|
|
You do so by setting the [[yii\data\Sort::sortParam|sortParam]] and [[yii\data\Pagination::pageParam|pageParam]]
|
|
of the dataProvider's [[yii\data\BaseDataProvider::$sort|sort]] and [[yii\data\BaseDataProvider::$pagination|pagination]]
|
|
instances.
|
|
|
|
Assume we want to list the `Post` and `User` models for which we have already prepared two data providers
|
|
in `$userProvider` and `$postProvider`:
|
|
|
|
```php
|
|
use yii\grid\GridView;
|
|
|
|
$userProvider->pagination->pageParam = 'user-page';
|
|
$userProvider->sort->sortParam = 'user-sort';
|
|
|
|
$postProvider->pagination->pageParam = 'post-page';
|
|
$postProvider->sort->sortParam = 'post-sort';
|
|
|
|
echo '<h1>Users</h1>';
|
|
echo GridView::widget([
|
|
'dataProvider' => $userProvider,
|
|
]);
|
|
|
|
echo '<h1>Posts</h1>';
|
|
echo GridView::widget([
|
|
'dataProvider' => $postProvider,
|
|
]);
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
### Using GridView with Pjax <span id="using-gridview-with-pjax"></span>
|
|
|
|
The [[yii\widgets\Pjax|Pjax]] widget allows you to update a certain section of a
|
|
page instead of reloading the entire page. You can use it to update only the
|
|
[[yii\grid\GridView|GridView]] content when using filters.
|
|
|
|
```php
|
|
use yii\widgets\Pjax;
|
|
use yii\grid\GridView;
|
|
|
|
Pjax::begin([
|
|
// PJax options
|
|
]);
|
|
Gridview::widget([
|
|
// GridView options
|
|
]);
|
|
Pjax::end();
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Pjax also works for the links inside the [[yii\widgets\Pjax|Pjax]] widget and
|
|
for the links specified by [[yii\widgets\Pjax::$linkSelector|Pjax::$linkSelector]].
|
|
But this might be a problem for the links of an [[yii\grid\ActionColumn|ActionColumn]].
|
|
To prevent this, add the HTML attribute `data-pjax="0"` to the links when you edit
|
|
the [[yii\grid\ActionColumn::$buttons|ActionColumn::$buttons]] property.
|
|
|
|
#### GridView/ListView with Pjax in Gii
|
|
|
|
Since 2.0.5, the CRUD generator of [Gii](start-gii.md) has an option called
|
|
`$enablePjax` that can be used via either web interface or command line.
|
|
|
|
```php
|
|
yii gii/crud --controllerClass="backend\\controllers\PostController" \
|
|
--modelClass="common\\models\\Post" \
|
|
--enablePjax=1
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Which generates a [[yii\widgets\Pjax|Pjax]] widget wrapping the
|
|
[[yii\grid\GridView|GridView]] or [[yii\widgets\ListView|ListView]] widgets.
|
|
|
|
Further reading
|
|
---------------
|
|
|
|
- [Rendering Data in Yii 2 with GridView and ListView](https://www.sitepoint.com/rendering-data-in-yii-2-with-gridview-and-listview/) by Arno Slatius.
|