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Flash Messages


Overview

Flash messages are used to notify the user about the state of actions he/she made or simply show information to the users. These kinds of messages can be generated using this component.

Adapters

This component uses adapters that dictate how messages are displayed or sent to the view. There are two adapters available but you can easily create your own adapter using the Phalcon\Flash\FlashInterface interface.

Adapter Description
Phalcon\Flash\Direct Directly outputs the messages passed to the flasher
Phalcon\Flash\Session Temporarily stores the messages in session, then messages can be printed in the next request

Direct

Phalcon\Flash\Direct can be used to directly output messages set in the component. This is useful in instances where you need to show data back to the user in the current request that does not employ any redirects.

<?php

use Phalcon\Escaper;
use Phalcon\Flash\Direct;

$escaper = new Escaper();
$flash   = new Direct($escaper);

$flash->error('Something went wrong');

Session

Phalcon\Flash\Session can be used to output messages set in the component. The component transparently stores the messages in the session to be used after a redirect.

<?php

use Phalcon\Escaper;
use Phalcon\Flash\Session as FlashSession;
use Phalcon\Session\Adapter\Stream;
use Phalcon\Session\Manager;

$session = new Manager();
$files = new Stream(
    [
        'savePath' => '/tmp',
    ]
);
$session->setHandler($files);

$escaper = new Escaper();
$flash   = new FlashSession($escaper, $session);

$flash->error('Something went wrong');

and in your view

<?php echo $flash->output(); ?>

or when using Volt

{% raw %}{{ flash.output() }}{% endraw %}

Imagine a login form that you need to validate the username and password and inform the user if their credentials are correct. The Phalcon\Flash\Session can be used to perform this task as follows:
- User enters credentials and clicks Login - The application posts the data to the loginAction of our controller - The application checks the data and the combination is not correct - The application stores the Incorrect Credentials message in the flash messenger - The application redirects the user back to the login page (/login) - The Flash messenger still holds the message Incorrect Credentials and will display it on the screen.

The example below displays this behavior in the controller. If an error occurs, whether this is an actual application error or a result of incorrect credentials, the code sets the messages using $this->flash->error().

<?php

namespace MyApp;

use Phalcon\Flash\Session;
use Phalcon\Http\Request;
use Phalcon\Http\Response;
use Phalcon\Mvc\Controller;
use Phalcon\Mvc\View;
use Vokuro\Auth\Auth; 
use Vokuro\Models\Users;
use Vokuro\Models\ResetPasswords;

/**
 * Controller used handle non-authenticated session actions like 
 * login/logout, user signup, and forgotten passwords
 *
 * @property Auth     $auth
 * @property Request  $request
 * @property Response $response
 * @property Session  $flashSession
 * @property View     $view
 */
class SessionController extends Controller
{
    /**
     * Starts a session in the admin backend
     */
    public function loginAction()
    {
        $form = new LoginForm();

        try {
            if (true !== $this->request->isPost()) {
                // ....
            } else {
                $postData = $this->request->getPost();
                if (true !== $form->isValid($postData)) {
                    // Flash
                    foreach ($form->getMessages() as $message) {
                        $this->flashSession->error($message);
                    }
                } else {
                    $email    = $this->request->getPost('email');
                    $password = $this->request->getPost('password');
                    $remember = $this->request->getPost('remember');

                    $this->auth->check(
                        [
                            'email'    => $email,
                            'password' => $password,
                            'remember' => $remember,
                        ]
                    );

                    return $this->response->redirect('users');
                }
            }
        } catch (AuthException $e) {
            // Flash
            $this->flashSession->error($e->getMessage());
        }

        $this->view->form = $form;
    }
}

and in your view

<?php echo $flashSession->output(); ?>

or when using Volt

{% raw %}{{ flashSession.output() }}{% endraw %}

NOTE

In the above example, the flashSession service has been already registered in the DI container. For more information about this please check the relevant section below.

Styling

The component (irrespective of adapter) offers automatic styling of messages on screen. This means that messages will be wrapped in <div> tags. There is also a mapping of message type to CSS class that you can take advantage of based on the stylesheet you use in your application. By default the component uses the following mapping:

Type Name of CSS class
error errorMessage
notice noticeMessage
success successMessage
warning warningMessage

By using the default classes, you can style errorMessage accordingly in the stylesheet of your application to make it appear the way you want it to. It is common for error messages to have a red background for instance so that they stand out.

An error message:

$flash->error('Error message');

will produce:

<div class="errorMessage">Error message</div>

If you do not wish to use the default classes, you can use the setCssClasses() method to replace the mapping of type of message to class name.

<?php

use Phalcon\Escaper;
use Phalcon\Flash\Direct;

$escaper = new Escaper();
$flash   = new Direct($escaper);

var_dump(
    $flash->getCssClasses()
);

// [
//     "error"   => "errorMessage",
//     "notice"  => "noticeMessage",
//     "success" => "successMessage",
//     "warning" => "warningMessage",
// ];


$cssClasses = [
    'error'   => 'alert alert-danger',
    'success' => 'alert alert-success',
    'notice'  => 'alert alert-info',
    'warning' => 'alert alert-warning',
];

$flash->setCssClasses($cssClasses);

and then calling

$flash->error('Error message');

will produce:

<div class="alert alert-danger">Error message</div>

NOTE

The setCssClasses() returns back the object so you can use in a more fluent interface by chaining calls.

The component also allows you to specify a different template, so that you can control the HTML produced by the component. The setCustomTemplate() and getCustomTemplate() expose this functionality. The template needs to have two placeholders:

  • %cssClass% - where the CSS class will be injected
  • %message% - where the message will be injected
<?php

use Phalcon\Escaper;
use Phalcon\Flash\Direct;

$escaper = new Escaper();
$flash   = new Direct($escaper);

$template = '<span class="%cssClass%">%message%</span>';

$flash->setCustomTemplate($template);

and then calling

$flash->error('Error message');

will produce:

<span class="myErrorClass">Error message</span>

NOTE

The setCustomTemplate() returns back the object so you can use in a more fluent interface by chaining calls.

Messages

As mentioned above, the component has different types of messages. To add a message to the component you can call message() with the type as well as the message itself. The types of messages are:

  • error
  • notice
  • success
  • warning
<?php

use Phalcon\Escaper;
use Phalcon\Flash\Direct;

$escaper = new Escaper();
$flash   = new Direct($escaper);

$flash->message('error', 'Error message');

While you can pass the type as the first parameter when calling message() you can also use the relevant helper methods that do that for you:

<?php

use Phalcon\Escaper;
use Phalcon\Flash\Direct;

$escaper = new Escaper();
$flash   = new Direct($escaper);

$flash->error('Error message');
$flash->notice('Notice message');
$flash->success('Success message');
$flash->warning('Warning message');

If your application requires it, you might want to clear the messages at some point when building the response. To do so you can use the clear() method.

<?php

use Phalcon\Escaper;
use Phalcon\Flash\Direct;

$escaper = new Escaper();
$flash   = new Direct($escaper);

$flash->error('Error message');

$flash->clear();

NOTE

clear() works only when the implicit flush is disabled (setImplicitFlush(false))

Implicit Flush

By default implicit flushing is set to true. You can however turn it off by using setImplicitFlush(false). The purpose of this method is to set whether the output must be implicitly flushed to the output or returned as string

<?php

use Phalcon\Escaper;
use Phalcon\Flash\Direct;

$escaper = new Escaper();
$flash   = new Direct($escaper);

echo $flash->getImplicitFlush(); // true

$flash->error('Error'); // No output

echo $flash
    ->setImplicitFlush(false) 
    ->error('Error Message') // 'Error Message'
;

NOTE

The setImplicitFlush() returns back the object so you can use in a more fluent interface by chaining calls.

NOTE

When using the Phalcon\Flash\Direct component, to directly show results on the page you must set setImplicitFlush() to false.

Escaping

By default, the component will escape the contents of the message. There might be times however that you do not wish to escape the contents of your messages. You can use the setAutoescape(false);

<?php

use Phalcon\Escaper;
use Phalcon\Flash\Direct;

$escaper = new Escaper();
$flash   = new Direct($escaper);

echo $flash->getAutoescape(); // true

$flash
    ->setAutoescape(false)
    ->error('<h1>Error</h1>')
;

will produce

<div class="errorMessage">&lt;h1&gt;Error&lt;/h1&gt;</div>

NOTE

The setAutoescape() returns back the object so you can use in a more fluent interface by chaining calls.

Dependency Injection

If you use the Phalcon\Di\FactoryDefault container, the Phalcon\Flash\Direct is already registered for you with the name flash. Additionally the Phalcon\Flash\Session is already registered for you with the name flashSession.

An example of the registration of the service as well as accessing it is below:

Direct

<?php

use Phalcon\Di;
use Phalcon\Escaper;
use Phalcon\Flash\Direct;

$container = new Di();
$escaper   = new Escaper();

$container->set(
    'flash',
    function () use ($escaper) {
        return new Direct($escaper);
    }
);

Session

<?php

use Phalcon\Di;
use Phalcon\Escaper;
use Phalcon\Flash\Session as FlashSession;
use Phalcon\Session\Adapter\Stream;
use Phalcon\Session\Manager;

$container = new Di();
$escaper   = new Escaper();
$session   = new Manager();
$files     = new Stream(
    [
        'savePath' => '/tmp',
    ]
);
$session->setHandler($files);

$container->set(
    'flashSession',
    function () use ($escaper, $session) {
        return new FlashSession($escaper, $session);
    }
);

NOTE

You do not need to pass the escaper or the session in the constructor. If you use the Di container and those services are already register in it, they will be used internally. This is another way of instantiating the components.

You can now use the component in a controller (or a component that implements Phalcon\Di\Injectable)

<?php

namespace MyApp;

use Phalcon\Flash\Direct;
use Phalcon\Mvc\Controller;

/**
 * Invoices controller
 *
 * @property Direct $flash
 */
class InvoicesController extends Controller
{
    public function indexAction()
    {

    }

    public function saveAction()
    {
        $this->flash->success('The post was correctly saved!');
    }
}