15
votes

I have a CakePHP application that in some moment will show a view with product media (pictures or videos) I want to know if, there is someway to include another view that threats the video or threats the pictures, depending on a flag. I want to use those "small views" to several other purposes, so It should be "like" a cake component, for reutilization.

What you guys suggest to use to be in Cake conventions (and not using a raw include('') command)

7
Check out this [link] (book.cakephp.org/1.3/en/The-Manual/Developing-with-CakePHP/…) and more specifically the Elements-part of that manual page, should tell you everything you need to know - thr
@FernandoBarrocal: This is a updated link for 2.X version book.cakephp.org/2.0/en/views.html#elements - EdgarT
Does any way to include multiple layout in a main layout, likewise in WordPress there is a function called get_template_part() - PlanetHackers

7 Answers

9
votes

In the interest of having the information here in case someone stumbles upon this, it is important to note that the solution varies depending on the CakePHP version.

For CakePHP 1.1

$this->renderElement('display', array('flag' => 'value'));

in your view, and then in /app/views/elements/ you can make a file called display.thtml, where $flag will have the value of whatever you pass to it.

For CakePHP 1.2

$this->element('display', array('flag' => 'value'));

in your view, and then in /app/views/elements/ you can make a file called display.ctp, where $flag will have the value of whatever you pass to it.


requestAction()
7
votes

In your controller (in this example the posts controller).

function something() {
    return $this->Post->find('all');
}

In your elements directory (app/views/element) create a file called posts.ctp.

In posts.ctp:

$posts = $this->requestAction('posts/something'); 
foreach($posts as $post): 
    echo $post['Post']['title']; 
endforeach; 

Then in your view:

<?php echo $this->element('posts'); ?>

This is mostly taken from the CakePHP book here: Creating Reusable Elements with requestAction

I do believe that using requestAction is quite expensive, so you will want to look into caching.

7
votes

Simply use:

<?php include('/<other_view>.ctp'); ?>

in the .ctp your action ends up in.

For example, build an archived function

function archived() {
  // do some stuff
  // you can even hook the index() function
  $myscope = array("archived = 1");
  $this->index($myscope);
  // coming back, so the archived view will be launched
  $this->set("is_archived", true); // e.g. use this in your index.ctp for customization
}

Possibly adjust your index action:

function index($scope = array()) {
  // ...
  $this->set(items, $this->paginate($scope));
}

Your archive.ctp will be:

<?php include('/index.ctp'); ?>

Ideal reuse of code of controller actions and views.

5
votes

For CakePHP 2.x

New for Cake 2.x is the abilty to extend a given view. So while elements are great for having little bits of reusable code, extending a view allows you to reuse whole views.

See the manual for more/better information

http://book.cakephp.org/2.0/en/views.html#extending-views

1
votes

Elements work if you want them to have access to the same data that the calling view has access to.

If you want your embedded view to have access to its own set of data, you might want to use something like requestAction(). This allows you to embed a full-fledged view that would otherwise be stand-alone.

0
votes

I want to use those "small views" to several other purposes, so It should be "like" a cake component, for reutilization.

This is done with "Helpers", as described here. But I'm not sure that's really what you want. The "Elements" suggestion seems correct too. It heavily depends of what you're trying to accomplish. My two cents...

0
votes

In CakePHP 3.x you can simple use:

$this->render('view')

This will render the view from the same directory as parent view.