PHP
The Visitor Pattern in PHP
The Visitor Pattern opens up your entities to extension without changing them (much); and keeps the code separate. Read more
The Visitor Pattern opens up your entities to extension without changing them (much); and keeps the code separate. Read more
In your tests, you might have used assertDatabaseHas to make sure that a model actual is persisted. it(‘will not delete a user’, function() { $user = User::find(1); // perform some logic of which you want Read more…
Bugs caused by race conditions can be a huge source or frustration. They are difficult to identify and often difficult to remedy. Read more
Here are a few best practices for working with a large tables. Read more
Here’s the recording of the latest edition of the Laravel Worldwide meetup. Philo Hermans showed off two great Livewire packages that he made. Steve McDougall did a cool live coding session on how to build Read more…
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My current setup (end 2021 edition)
After tweeting out a screenshot, it often get questions around which editor, font or color scheme I'm using. Instead of replying to those questions individually I've decided to just write down the settings and apps that I'm using.
I mainly program PHP. Mostly I develop in PhpStorm. Here's a screenshot of it:
I'm using phpstorm-light-lite-theme which was handcrafted by my colleague Brent. The font used is Menlo.
Like seen in the screenshot I've hidden a lot of things of the UI of PhpStorm. I like to keep it minimal.
I like working using a light based theme. In some circles this is maybe a bit controversial. Watch this excellent video by my colleague Brent to learn what the benefits of using a light based theme are.
Mostly I work on Laravel projects. One of my favourite PhpStorm extensions is Laravel Idea, which can do stuff like autocomplete route names, request fields, and a whole lot more. It's paid, but definitely worth it.
Another PhpStorm plugin that I use is the Pest Plugin. It makes Pest a first class citizen in the IDE. This one is free.
Here's a screenshot from my terminal.
All my terminal settings are saved in my dotfiles repository. If you want the same environment you follow the installation instructions of the repo.
My terminal of choice is iTerm2. I'm using the Z shell and Oh My Zsh.
The color scheme used is a slightly modified version of Solarized Dark. The font used is a patched version of Menlo. I'm using several hand crafted aliases and functions.
I'm a day one upgrader of MacOS, so I'm always using the latest version. I also sometimes dare to use beta versions of MacOS when people are saying it's stable enough.
By default I hide the menu bar and dock. I like to keep my desktop ultra clean, even hard disks aren't allowed to be displayed there. On my dock there aren't any sticky programs. Only apps that are running are on there. I only have a stacks to Downloads and Desktop permanently on there. Here's a screenshot where I've deliberately moved my pointer down so the dock is shown.
I've also hidden the indicator for running apps (that dot underneath each app), because if it's on my dock it's running.
In my dotfiles repo you'll find my custom MacOS settings.
The spacey background I'm using was the default one on OSX 10.6 Snow Leopard. If you would like to use a class OSX background to, head over to this page at 512pixels.net.
These are some of the apps I'm using:
To run projects locally I use Laravel Valet.
I couldn't live without Alfred. I'm using several workflows. First up is syn and assoc by Sebastian De Deyne, to help with naming things. phpstorm by bchatard to easily open recent PhpStorm projects. Last by not least I use the Laravel docs workflow by Till Krüss to easily search the Laravel docs.
To connect to S3, ftp (?) and sftp servers I use Transmit.
Local mail testing is done with Nodemailer. This handly little app install a local mailserver. In the apps you develop locally you can use that webserver to send mails. You can inspect all sent mails in Nodemailers beautiful, native UI.
Sometimes I need to run an arbitrary piece of PHP code. CodeRunner is an excellent app to do just that.
Paw is an amazing app to perform API calls.
I use BetterTouchTool to quickly resize windows quarter, half and full screen.
Databases are managed with TablePlus
My favourite cloud storage solution is Dropbox. All my personal documents are on there and at Spatie we use it extensively too.
If you're not using a password manager, you're doing it wrong. I use 1Password. Personal passwords are sync in a vault stored on Dropbox. For Spatie we have a team account.
All settings of my apps are backupped to Dropbox through Mackup. This is a fantastic piece of software that moves all your preferences to Dropbox and symlinks them.
I don't use Time Machine, my backups are handled with Backblaze.
Tweets are tweeted with Tweetbot.
I read a lot of blogs through RSS feeds in Reeder.
Mails are read and written in Mimestream. Unlike other email clients which rely on IMAP, Mimestream uses the full Gmail API. It super fast, and the author is dedicated using the latest stuff in MacOS. It's a magnificent app really.
My browser of choice is Safari, because of its speed and low power use. To block ads on certain sites I use the AdGuard plugin.
I like to write long blogposts in iA Writer
Calendars are managed in Fantastical 2
To create videos I use ScreenFlow.
I regularly stream stuff on YouTube. For that I use Ecamm Live
To pair program with anyone in my team, I use Tuple. The quality of the shared screen and sound is fantastic.
Even though I'm not a designer I sometimes have to edit images. For this I use Pixelmator.
GrandPerspective is a hidden gem that helps you determine how your disk space is being use used.
Outside of programming, I also record music. My DAW of choice is Ableton, I'm using the complete edition.
Here's a screenshot of my current homescreen.
I don't use folders and try to keep the number of installed apps to a minimum. There's also just one screen with apps, all the other apps are opened via search. Most of my time is spent in Safari, Pocket, Reeder and Tweetbot. Notifications and notification badges are turned off for all apps except Messages.
Here's a rundown of some of the apps currently on the homescreen:
1Password: my favourite password manager
Air Video HD: I find it much more reliable to sync videos to this one the stock Videos app. No iTunes needed.
Overcast: an excellent podcast client
Telegram: most of my geeky friends are on there
iA writer: to quickly write some stuff or take notes on the go
Clock: tick, tock, ...
Stripe: to quickly check how Flare and Oh Dear are doing financially
Mobile: horribly named, this the mobile banking app of my bank
Reeder: an RSS client
Slack: for communicating with my team and some other communities
Letterboxd: a pretty imdb. I use it to log every movie I watch
Railer: to easily look up the train schedules in Belgium
Pocket: my favourite read later service
Things: contains my to dos
Nuki: this controls the electronic doorlock at our office
There's no other screens setup. I use the App Library to hunt down any app I want to use that isn't on the home screen.
Here's a picture of the desk I have at home.
Behind my desk there's a Hue Light Strip. When working in the evening, I like to set it to a moody color.
.
And this is how things look like when I stream.
.
I'm using a MacBook Pro 14" with an Apple M1 Pro processor, 16GB of RAM and 1T hard disk.
I usually work in closed-display mode. To save some desk space, I use a beautiful vertical Mac stand: the Twelve South BookArc.
Here's the hardware that is on my desk
a space grey wireless Apple Magic Keyboard with numeric keys
a space grey Apple Magic Trackpad 2
an LG 32UK550-B external monitor
a Livboj Wireless charger
two Elegato Air lights. These make a tremedous difference in quality when streaming
a Sure SM7B mic
when streaming, I use a Streamdeck to quickly switch scenes in Ecamm Live.
As a webcam I use a Sony a6400 camera with a Sigma 16mm 1.4 lens. It is connected to my computer via an Elgato Cam Link 4K. The camera also mounted on a Roda PSA1 boom arm, and when I'm not using it, the camera is behind my monitor.
To connect all external hardware to my MacBook I got a CalDigit TS3 plus. This allows me to connect the webcam / mic / USB Piano keyboard, and more to my MacBook with a single USB-C cable. That cable also charges the MacBook. Less clutter on the desktop, means I have more headspace, so I'm pretty happy with the TS3 plus.
I play music on a HomePod stereo pair. To stay in "the zone" when commuting and at the office I put on my QuietComfort 35 wireless headphones.
My current phone is an iPhone 13 Pro Max with 128 GB of storage.
At Spatie, we use Google Workspace to handle mail and calendars
High level planning at the company is done using Float
All servers I work on are provisioned by Forge.
The performance and uptime of those servers are monitored via Oh Dear.
To track exceptions in production, we use Flare
To send mails to our audience that is interested in our paid products, we use our homegrown Mailcoach.
If you want to know some more tools we use at Spatie, go over to the uses page on our company website.
Every year, I write a new version of the post. Here's the 2020 version.
If you have any questions on any of these apps and services, feel free to contact me on Twitter.
Here’s how to use our spatie/simple-excel package to reate multi-worksheet files. Read more
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In the vast majority of applications you work with data structures. Sometimes that data is described multiple times. Think for instance of a form request that tries to validate a blog post model, and an API transformer class for that same blog post model. Changes are that both classes describe the same properties.
Using our new laravel-data package, those structures only need to be described once.
Instead of form requests, you can use a data object. Instead of API transformers, you can use a data object. Instead of manually writing typescript definitions, you can use... ð¥ a data object
In this blog post, I'll guide you through the most important functionalities of the package and how to use them.
First, you should install the package.
We're going to create a blog with different posts so let's get started with the PostData object. A post has a title, some content, a status and a date when it was published:
class PostData extends Data
{
public function __construct(
public string $title,
public string $content,
public PostStatus $status,
public ?CarbonImmutable $published_at
) {
}
}
The only requirement for using the package is extending your data objects from the base Data object. We add the requirements for a post as public properties.
The PostStatus is an enum using the spatie/enum package:
/**
* @method static self draft()
* @method static self published()
* @method static self archived()
*/
class PostStatus extends Enum
{
}
We store this PostData object as app/Data/PostData.php, so we have all our data objects bundled in one directory. Of course, you're free to store them wherever you want within your application.
We can now create this a PostData object just like any plain PHP object:
$post = new PostData(
'Hello laravel-data',
'This is an introduction post for the new package',
PostStatus::published(),
CarbonImmutable::now()
);
The package also allows you to create these data objects from any type, for example, an array:
$post = PostData::from([
'title' => 'Hello laravel-data',
'content' => 'This is an introduction post for the new package',
'status' => PostStatus::published(),
'published_at' => CarbonImmutable::now(),
]);
Now let's say we have request with these properties. Our controller would then look like
this:
public function __invoke(Request $request)
{
$post = PostData::from([
'title' => $request->input('title'),
'content' => $request->input('content'),
'status' => PostStatus::from($request->input('status')),
'published_at' => CarbonImmutable::createFromFormat(DATE_ATOM, $request->input('published_at')),
]);
}
That's a lot of code just to fill a data object. It would be a lot nicer if we could do this:
public function __invoke(Request $request)
{
$post = PostData::from($request);
}
But this throws the following exception:
TypeError: AppDataPostData::__construct(): Argument #3 ($status) must be of type AppEnumsPostStatus, string given
That's because the status property expects a PostStatus enum object, but it gets a string. We can fix this by implementing a cast for enums:
class PostStatusCast implements Cast
{
public function cast(DataProperty $property, mixed $value): PostStatus
{
return PostStatus::from($value);
}
}
And tell the package always to use this cast when trying to create a PostData object:
class PostData extends Data
{
public function __construct(
public string $title,
public string $content,
#[WithCast(PostStatusCast::class)]
public PostStatus $status,
public ?CarbonImmutable $published_at
) {
}
}
Let's send the following payload to the controller:
{
"title" : "Hello laravel-data",
"content" : "This is an introduction post for the new package",
"status" : "published",
"published_at" : "2021-09-24T13:31:20+00:00"
}
We get the PostData object populated with the values in the JSON payload, neat! But how did the package convert the published_at string into a CarbonImmutable object?
It is possible to define global casts within the data.php config file. These casts will be used on data objects if no other casts can be found.
By default, the global casts list looks like this:
'casts' => [
DateTimeInterface::class => SpatieLaravelDataCastsDateTimeInterfaceCast::class,
],
This means that if a class property is of type DateTime, Carbon, CarbonImmutable, ... it will be automatically converted.
You can read more about casting here.
Since we're working with requests, wouldn't it be cool to validate the data coming in from the request using the data object? Typically, you would create a request with a validator like this:
class PostDataRequest extends FormRequest
{
public function authorize()
{
return false;
}
public function rules()
{
return [
'title' => ['required', 'string', 'max:200'],
'content' => ['required', 'string'],
'status' => ['required', 'string', 'in:draft,published,archived'],
'published_at' => ['nullable', 'date']
];
}
}
Thanks to PHP 8.0 attributes, we can completely omit this PostDataRequest and use the data object instead:
class PostData extends Data
{
public function __construct(
#[Required, StringType, Max(200)]
public string $title,
#[Required, StringType]
public string $content,
#[Required, StringType, In(['draft', 'published', 'archived'])]
public PostStatus $status,
#[Nullable, Date]
public ?CarbonImmutable $published_at
) {
}
}
You can now inject the data object into your application, just like a Laravel form request:
public function __invoke(PostData $data)
{
dd($data); // a filled in data object
}
When the given data is invalid, a user will be redirected back with the validation errors in the error bag. If a validation occurs when making a JSON request, a 422 response will be returned with the validation errors.
Because our data object is so well-typed, we can even drop some validation rules since they can be automatically deduced:
class PostData extends Data
{
public function __construct(
#[Max(200)]
public string $title,
public string $content,
#[StringType, In(['draft', 'published', 'archived'])]
public PostStatus $status,
#[Date]
public ?CarbonImmutable $published_at
) {
}
}
There's still much more you can do with validating data objects. Read more about it here.
Typically, you would use a controller to get the request data, and pass it to objects that need that data.
There's also another pragmatic way to get to the request data: you can resolve a data object from the container:
app(PostData::class);
The returned PostData instance will be filled with data from the request. If for some reason the request data could not be mapped upon the data object (maybe validation failed), than the package will throw a IlluminateValidationValidationException.
In most cases, you won't need this, but it's cool that you can.
In our application, we have a Post Eloquent model:
class Post extends Model
{
protected $fillable = '*';
protected $casts = [
'status' => PostStatus::class
];
protected $dates = [
'published_at'
];
}
Thanks to the casts we added earlier, this can be quickly transformed into a PostData object:
PostData::from(Post::findOrFail($id));
It is even possible to manually define how such a model is mapped onto a data object. To demonstrate that, we will take a completely different example that shows the strength of the from method.
What if we would like to support to create posts via an email syntax like this:
title|status|content
Creating a PostData object would then look like this:
PostData::from('Hello laravel-data|draft|This is an introduction post for the new package');
To make this work, we need to add a magic creation function within our data class:
class PostData extends Data
{
public function __construct(
public string $title,
public string $content,
#[WithCast(PostStatusCast::class)]
public PostStatus $status,
public ?CarbonImmutable $published_at
) {
}
public static function fromString(string $post): PostData
{
$fields = explode('|', $post);
return new self(
$fields[0],
$fields[2],
PostStatus::from($fields[1]),
null
);
}
}
Magic creation methods allow you to create data objects from any type by passing them to the from method of a data
object, you can read more about it here.
It can be convenient to transform more complex models than our Post into data objects because you can decide how a model
would be mapped onto a data object.
Now that we have a fully functional post data object. We're going to create a new data object, AuthorData that will store the name of an author and a collection of posts the author wrote:
class AuthorData extends Data
{
public function __construct(
public string $name,
/** @var AppDataPostData[] */
public DataCollection $posts
) {
}
}
Instead of using an array to store all the posts, we use a DataCollection. This will be very useful later on! We now can create an author object as such:
new AuthorData(
'Ruben Van Assche',
PostData::collection([
new PostData('Hello laravel-data', 'This is an introduction post for the new package', PostStatus::draft(), null),
new PostData('What is a data object', 'How does it work?', PostStatus::draft(), null),
])
);
But it is also possible to create an author using the from method:
AuthorData::from([
'name' => 'Ruben Van Assche',
'posts' => [
[
'title' => 'Hello laravel-data',
'content' => 'This is an introduction post for the new package',
'status' => 'draft',
'published_at' => null,
],
[
'title' => 'What is a data object',
'content' => 'How does it work',
'status' => 'draft',
'published_at' => null,
],
],
]);
The data object is smart enough to convert an array of posts into a data collection of post data. Mapping data coming from the frontend was never that easy!
You can do a lot more with data collections. Read more about it here.
We've been creating many data objects from all sorts of values, time to change course and go the other way around and start transforming data objects into arrays.
Let's say we have an API controller that returns a post:
public function __invoke()
{
return new PostData(
'Hello laravel-data',
'This is an introduction post for the new package',
PostStatus::published(),
CarbonImmutable::create(2020, 05, 16),
);
}
By returning a data object in a controller, it is automatically converted to JSON:
{
"title" : "Hello laravel-data",
"content" : "This is an introduction post for the new package",
"status" : "published",
"published_at" : "2021-09-24T13:31:20+00:00"
}
You can also easily convert a data object into an array as such:
$postData->toArray();
Which gives you an array like this:
[
'title' => 'Hello laravel-data',
'content' => 'This is an introduction post for the new package',
'status' => 'published',
'published_at' => '2021-09-24T13:31:20+00:00',
]
It is possible to transform a data object into an array and keep complex types like the PostStatus and CarbonImmutable:
$postData->all();
This will give the following array:
[
'title' => 'Hello laravel-data',
'content' => 'This is an introduction post for the new package',
'status' => PostStatus::published(),
'published_at' => CarbonImmutable::create(2020, 05, 16),
]
As you can see, if we transform a data object to JSON, the CarbonImmutable published at date is transformed into a string.
A few sections ago, we used casts to convert simple types into complex types. Transformers work the other way around. They transform complex types into simple ones and transform a data object into a simpler structure like an array or JSON.
Just like the DateTimeInterfaceCast we also have a DateTimeInterfaceTransformer that will convert DateTime, Carbon, ... objects into strings.
This DateTimeInterfaceTransformer is registered in the data.php config file and will automatically be used when a data object needs to transform a DateTimeInterface object:
'transformers' => [
DateTimeInterface::class => SpatieLaravelDataTransformersDateTimeInterfaceTransformer::class,
IlluminateContractsSupportArrayable::class => SpatieLaravelDataTransformersArrayableTransformer::class,
],
The value of the PostStatus enum is automatically transformed to a string because it implements JsonSerializable, but it is perfectly possible to write a custom transformer for it just like we built our custom cast a few sections ago:
class PostStatusTransformer implements Transformer
{
public function transform(DataProperty $property, mixed $value): string
{
/** @var AppEnumsPostStatus $value */
return $value->value;
}
}
We now can use this transformer in the data object like this:
class PostData extends Data
{
public function __construct(
public string $title,
public string $content,
#[WithTransformer(PostStatusTransformer::class)]
public PostStatus $status,
public ?CarbonImmutable $published_at
) {
}
}
You can read a lot more about transformers here.
We now can send our posts as JSON to the front, but what if we want to create a new post? When using Inertia, for example, we might need an empty blueprint object like this that the user could fill in:
{
"title" : null,
"content" : null,
"status" : null,
"published_at" : null
}
This can be done with the empty method, which will return an empty array following the structure of your data object:
PostData::empty();
This will return the following array:
[
'title' => null,
'content' => null,
'status' => null,
'published_at' => null,
]
It is possible to set the status of the post to draft by default:
PostData::empty([
'status' => 'draft';
]);
I hope you liked this quick overview of this package. There's still a lot more you can do with data objects like:
casting them into Eloquent models
transforming the structure to typescript
working with DataCollections
If you want to know more about this package, head over to the extensive documentation.
This isn't the first package that our team has made. Our website has an open source section that lists every package that our team has made. I'm pretty sure that there's something there for your next project. Currently, all of our package combined are being downloaded 10 million times a month.
Our team doesn't only create open-source, but also paid digital products, such as Ray, Mailcoach and Flare. Our team also creates premium video courses, such as Laravel Beyond CRUD, Testing Laravel, Laravel Package Training and Event Sourcing in Laravel. If you want to support our open source efforts, consider picking up one of our paid products.
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