This is a PHP package for automatically create Twig components as tags. This is highly inspired from Laravel Blade Components.
You can install the package via Composer:
composer require performing/twig-components
This package should work anywhere where Twig is available.
/** @var \Twig\Environment $twig */
use Performing\TwigComponents\Configuration;
Configuration::make($twig)
->setTemplatesPath('/relative/directory/to/components')
->setTemplatesExtension('twig')
->useCustomTags()
->setup();
To enable the package just pass your Twig environment object to the function and specify your components folder relative to your Twig templates folder.
In Craft CMS you should do something like this.
// Module.php
if (Craft::$app->request->getIsSiteRequest()) {
Event::on(
Plugins::class,
Plugins::EVENT_AFTER_LOAD_PLUGINS,
function (Event $event) {
$twig = Craft::$app->getView()->getTwig();
\Performing\TwigComponents\Configuration::make($twig)
->setTemplatesPath('/components')
->useCustomTags()
->setup();
}
);
}
The
if
statement ensure you don't get'Unable to register extension "..." as extensions have already been initialized'
as error.
In Symfony you can do something like this.
# services.yml
services:
My\Namespace\TwigEnvironmentConfigurator:
decorates: 'twig.configurator.environment'
arguments: [ '@My\Namespace\TwigEnvironmentConfigurator.inner' ]
// TwigEnvironmentConfigurator.php
use Symfony\Bundle\TwigBundle\DependencyInjection\Configurator\EnvironmentConfigurator;
use Twig\Environment;
use Performing\TwigComponents\Configuration;
final class TwigEnvironmentConfigurator
{
public function __construct(
private EnvironmentConfigurator $decorated
) {}
public function configure(Environment $environment) : void
{
$this->decorated->configure($environment);
// Relative path to your components folder
$relativePath = '_components';
Configuration::make($environment)
->setTemplatesPath($relativePath)
->setTemplatesExtension('twig')
->useCustomTags()
->setup();
}
}
In OctoberCMS / WinterCMS you need to hook into cms.page.beforedisplay
event inside your plugin's boot method in order to access twig instance.
Then you can use your plugin hint path to choose a views subfolder as component's folder.
es.
plugins
|__namespace
|__pluginname
|__views
|__components
|__button.htm
public function boot(): void
{
Event::Listen('cms.page.beforeDisplay', function ($controller, $url, $page) {
$twig = $controller->getTwig();
Configuration::make($twig)
->setTemplatesPath('namespace.pluginname::components', hint: true)
->useCustomTags()
->useGlobalContext() // use this to keep twig context from cms
->setup();
});
}
then in your htm files
<x-button>...</x-button>
Alle features like subfolders are supported, like <x-forms.input></x-forms.input>
will refer to plugins/namespace/pluginname/views/forms/input.htm
The components are just Twig templates in a folder of your choice (e.g. components
) and can be used anywhere in your Twig templates. The slot variable is any content you will add between the opening and the close tag.
{# /components/button.twig #}
<button>
{{ slot }}
</button>
To reach a component you need to use custom tag x
followed by a :
and the filename of your component.
{# /index.twig #}
{% x:button %}
<strong>Click me</strong>
{% endx %}
You can also pass any params like you would using an include
. The benefit is that you will have the powerful attributes
variable to merge attributes or to change your component behaviour.
{# /components/button.twig #}
<button {{ attributes.merge({ class: 'rounded px-4' }) }}>
{{ slot }}
</button>
{# /index.twig #}
{% x:button with {'class': 'text-white'} %}
<strong>Click me</strong>
{% endx %}
{# Rendered #}
<button class="text-white rounded-md px-4 py-2">
<strong>Click me</strong>
</button>
To reach components that are in sub-folders you can use dot-notation syntax.
{# /components/button/primary.twig #}
<button>
{{ slot }}
</button>
{# /index.twig #}
{% x:button.primary %}
<strong>Click me</strong>
{% endx %}
The same behaviour can be obtained with a special HTML syntax. The previus component example can alse be used in this way.
{# /index.twig #}
<x-button class='bg-blue-600'>
<span class="text-lg">Click here!</span>
</x-button>
{# /components/card.twig #}
<div {{ attributes.class('bg-white shadow p-3 rounded') }}>
<h2 {{ title.attributes.class('font-bold') }}>
{{ title }}
</h2>
<div>
{{ body }}
</div>
</div>
{# /index.twig #}
<x-card>
<x-slot name="title" class="text-2xl">title</x-slot>
<x-slot name="body">Body text</x-slot>
</x-card>
Also with the standard syntax.
{# /index.twig #}
{% x:card %}
{% slot:title with {class: "text-2xl"} %}
Title
{% endslot %}
{% slot:body %}
Title
{% endslot %}
{% endx %}
You can pass any attribute to the component in different ways. To interprate the content as Twig you need to prepend the attribute name with a :
but it works also in other ways.
<x-button
:any="'evaluate' ~ 'twig'"
other="{{'this' ~ 'works' ~ 'too'}}"
another="or this"
this="{{'this' ~ 'does'}}{{ 'not work' }}"
>
Submit
</x-button>
In addition to the specified directory, you can also reference components from a Twig namespace by prepending the namespace and a :
to the component name. With a namespace defined like so:
// register namespace with twig template loader
$loader->addPath(__DIR__ . '/some/other/dir', 'ns');
Components can be included with the following:
{% x:ns:button with {class:'bg-blue-600'} %}
<span class="text-lg">Click here!</span>
{% endx %}
{# or #}
<x-ns:button class='bg-blue-600'>
<span class="text-lg">Click here!</span>
</x-ns:button>
Sometimes you may need to render a component but not know which component should be rendered until runtime. In this situation, you may use the built-in dynamic-component component to render the component based on a runtime value or variable:
{% set componentName = 'button' %}
<x-dynamic-component :component="componentName" class='bg-blue-600'>
<span class="text-lg">Click here!</span>
</x-dynamic-component>
Pull requests are welcome. For major changes, please open an issue first to discuss what you would like to change.
Please make sure to update tests as appropriate.
composer test
The MIT License (MIT). Please see License File for more information.