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65 Application Components

Controllers are part of the MVC architecture. They are objects of classes extending from [[yii\base\Controller]] and are responsible for processing requests and generating responses. In particular, after taking over the control from applications, controllers will analyze incoming request data, pass them to models, inject model results into views, and finally generate outgoing responses.

Controllers are composed of actions which are the most basic units that end users can address and request for execution. A controller can have one or multiple actions.

The following example shows a post controller with two actions: view and create :

namespace app\controllers;

use Yii;

use app\models\Post;

use yii\web\Controller;

use yii\web\NotFoundHttpException;

class PostController extends Controller {

public function actionView($id)

{

$model = Post::findOne($id); if ($model === null) {

throw new NotFoundHttpException; }

return $this->render('view', [ 'model' => $model, ]);

}

public function actionCreate()

{

$model = new Post;

if ($model->load(Yii::$app->request->post()) && $model->save()) { return $this->redirect(['view', 'id' => $model->id]); } else { return $this->render('create', [ 'model' => $model, ]); } } }

In the view action (defined by the actionView() method), the code first loads the model according to the requested model

ID; If the model is loaded successfully, it will display it using a view named view . Otherwise, it will throw an exception.

In the create action (defined by the actionCreate() method), the code is similar. It first tries to populate the model using

the request data and save the model. If both succeed it will redirect the browser to the view action with the ID of the newly

created model. Otherwise it will display the create view through which users can provide the needed input.

End users address actions through the so-called routes. A route is a string that consists of the following parts:

Controllers

Actions

Routes

66 Controllers

a module ID: this exists only if the controller belongs to a non-application module; a controller ID: a string that uniquely identifies the controller among all controllers within the same application (or the same module if the controller belongs to a module); an action ID: a string that uniquely identifies the action among all actions within the same controller. Routes take the following format: ControllerID/ActionID or the following format if the controller belongs to a module: ModuleID/ControllerID/ActionID

So if a user requests with the URL http://hostname/index.php?r=site/index , the index action in the site controller will be

executed. For more details on how routes are resolved into actions, please refer to the Routing and URL Generation

section.

In [[yii\web\Application|Web applications]], controllers should extend from [[yii\web\Controller]] or its child classes. Similarly in [[yii\console\Application|console applications]], controllers should extend from [[yii\console\Controller]] or its child classes. The following code defines a site controller:

namespace app\controllers;

use yii\web\Controller;

class SiteController extends Controller {

}

Usually, a controller is designed to handle the requests regarding a particular type of resource. For this reason, controller IDs are often nouns referring to the types of the resources that they are handling. For example, you may use article as

the ID of a controller that handles article data.

By default, controller IDs should contain these characters only: English letters in lower case, digits, underscores, dashes and forward slashes. For example, article and post-comment are both valid controller IDs, while article? , PostComment , admin\post are not.

A controller ID may also contain a subdirectory prefix. For example, admin/article stands for an article controller in the admin subdirectory under the [[yii\base\Application::controllerNamespace|controller namespace]]. Valid characters for subdirectory prefixes include: English letters in lower and upper cases, digits, underscores and forward slashes, where forward slashes are used as separators for multi-level subdirectories (e.g. panels/admin ). Controller class names can be derived from controller IDs according to the following rules: Turn the first letter in each word separated by dashes into upper case. Note that if the controller ID contains slashes,

Creating Controllers

Controller IDs

Controller Class Naming

67 Controllers

Remove dashes and replace any forward slashes with backward slashes. Append the suffix Controller .

And prepend the [[yii\base\Application::controllerNamespace|controller namespace]].

The following are some examples, assuming the [[yii\base\Application::controllerNamespace|controller namespace]] takes the default value app\controllers :

article derives app\controllers\ArticleController ;

post-comment derives app\controllers\PostCommentController ;

admin/post-comment derives app\controllers\admin\PostCommentController ;

adminPanels/post-comment derives app\controllers\adminPanels\PostCommentController .

Controller classes must be autoloadable. For this reason, in the above examples, the article controller class should be

saved in the file whose alias is @app/controllers/ArticleController.php ; while the admin/post2-comment controller should be

in @app/controllers/admin/Post2CommentController.php .

Info: The last example admin/post2-comment shows how you can put a controller under a sub-directory of the

[[yii\base\Application::controllerNamespace|controller namespace]]. This is useful when you want to organize your controllers into several categories and you do not want to use modules.

You can configure [[yii\base\Application::controllerMap|controller map]] to overcome the constraints of the controller IDs and class names described above. This is mainly useful when you are using some third-party controllers which you do not have control over their class names.

You may configure [[yii\base\Application::controllerMap|controller map]] in the application configuration like the following:

[ 'controllerMap' => [ // declares "account" controller using a class name 'account' => 'app\controllers\UserController', // declares "article" controller using a configuration array 'article' => [ 'class' => 'app\controllers\PostController', 'enableCsrfValidation' => false, ], ], ] Each application has a default controller specified via the [[yii\base\Application::defaultRoute]] property. When a request does not specify a route, the route specified by this property will be used. For [[yii\web\Application|Web applications]], its value is 'site' , while for [[yii\console\Application|console applications]], it is help . Therefore, if a URL is

http://hostname/index.php , it means the site controller will handle the request.

You may change the default controller with the following application configuration: [ 'defaultRoute' => 'main', ]

Controller Map

Default Controller

68 Controllers

Creating actions can be as simple as defining the so-called action methods in a controller class. An action method is a

public method whose name starts with the word action . The return value of an action method represents the response

data to be sent to end users. The following code defines two actions index and hello-world :

namespace app\controllers;

use yii\web\Controller;

class SiteController extends Controller {

public function actionIndex()

{

return $this->render('index'); }

public function actionHelloWorld()

{

return 'Hello World'; }

}

An action is often designed to perform a particular manipulation about a resource. For this reason, action IDs are usually verbs, such as view , update , etc.

By default, action IDs should contain these characters only: English letters in lower case, digits, underscores and dashes. The dashes in an actionID are used to separate words. For example, view , update2 , comment-post are all valid action

IDs, while view? , Update are not.

You can create actions in two ways: inline actions and standalone actions. An inline action is defined as a method in the controller class, while a standalone action is a class extending [[yii\base\Action]] or its child class. Inline actions take less effort to create and are often preferred if you have no intention to reuse these actions. Standalone actions, on the other hand, are mainly created to be used in different controllers or be redistributed as extensions. Inline actions refer to the actions that are defined in terms of action methods as we just described. The names of the action methods are derived from action IDs according to the following criteria: Turn the first letter in each word of the action ID into upper case; Remove dashes; Prepend the prefix action .

For example, index becomes actionIndex , and hello-world becomes actionHelloWorld .

Note: The names of the action methods are case-sensitive. If you have a method named ActionIndex , it will not be

considered as an action method, and as a result, the request for the index action will result in an exception. Also

note that action methods must be public. A private or protected method does NOT define an inline action. Inline actions are the most commonly defined actions because they take little effort to create. However, if you plan to reuse the same action in different places, or if you want to redistribute an action, you should consider defining it as a standalone action.

Creating Actions

Action IDs

Inline Actions

69 Controllers

Standalone actions are defined in terms of action classes extending [[yii\base\Action]] or its child classes. For example, in the Yii releases, there are [[yii\web\ViewAction]] and [[yii\web\ErrorAction]], both of which are standalone actions.

To use a standalone action, you should declare it in the action map by overriding the [[yii\base\Controller::actions()]] method in your controller classes like the following:

public function actions()

{ return [ // declares "error" action using a class name 'error' => 'yii\web\ErrorAction', // declares "view" action using a configuration array 'view' => [ 'class' => 'yii\web\ViewAction', 'viewPrefix' => '', ], ]; }

As you can see, the actions() method should return an array whose keys are action IDs and values the corresponding

action class names or configurations. Unlike inline actions, action IDs for standalone actions can contain arbitrary characters, as long as they are declared in the actions() method.

To create a standalone action class, you should extend [[yii\base\Action]] or its child class, and implement a public method named run() . The role of the run() method is similar to that of an action method. For example,

<?php

namespace app\components;

use yii\base\Action;

class HelloWorldAction extends Action {

public function run()

{

return "Hello World"; }

}

The return value of an action method or the run() method of a standalone action is significant. It stands for the result of

the corresponding action.

The return value can be a response object which will be sent to the end user as the response.

For [[yii\web\Application|Web applications]], the return value can also be some arbitrary data which will be assigned to [[yii\web\Response::data]] and be further converted into a string representing the response body. For [[yii\console\Application|console applications]], the return value can also be an integer representing the [[yii\console\Response::exitStatus|exit status]] of the command execution. In the examples shown above, the action results are all strings which will be treated as the response body to be sent to end users. The following example shows how an action can redirect the user browser to a new URL by returning a response object (because the [[yii\web\Controller::redirect()|redirect()]] method returns a response object):

Action Results

70 Controllers

public function actionForward()

{

// redirect the user browser to http://example.com return $this->redirect('http://example.com'); }

The action methods for inline actions and the run() methods for standalone actions can take parameters, called action

parameters. Their values are obtained from requests. For [[yii\web\Application|Web applications]], the value of each action

parameter is retrieved from $_GET using the parameter name as the key; for [[yii\console\Application|console applications]],

they correspond to the command line arguments.

In the following example, the view action (an inline action) has declared two parameters: $id and $version .

namespace app\controllers;

use yii\web\Controller;

class PostController extends Controller {

public function actionView($id, $version = null)

{

// ... }

}

The action parameters will be populated as follows for different requests:

http://hostname/index.php?r=post/view&id=123 : the $id parameter will be filled with the value '123' , while $version

is still null because there is no version query parameter.

http://hostname/index.php?r=post/view&id=123&version=2 : the $id and $version parameters will be filled with '123'

and '2' , respectively.

http://hostname/index.php?r=post/view : a [[yii\web\BadRequestHttpException]] exception will be thrown because the

required $id parameter is not provided in the request.

http://hostname/index.php?r=post/view&id[]=123 : a [[yii\web\BadRequestHttpException]] exception will be thrown

because $id parameter is receiving an unexpected array value ['123'] .

If you want an action parameter to accept array values, you should type-hint it with array , like the following:

public function actionView(array $id, $version = null)

{

// ... }

Now if the request is http://hostname/index.php?r=post/view&id[]=123 , the $id parameter will take the value of ['123'] . If

the request is http://hostname/index.php?r=post/view&id=123 , the $id parameter will still receive the same array value

because the scalar value '123' will be automatically turned into an array.

The above examples mainly show how action parameters work for Web applications. For console applications, please refer to the Console Commands section for more details.

Each controller has a default action specified via the [[yii\base\Controller::defaultAction]] property. When a route contains

Action Parameters

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