As of Laravel 9.2.0, you may use the native whereNot
method. This package will be maintained for some time for Laravel 8 users but will be deprecated eventually.
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- PHP 7.4+
- Laravel 8.0 or 9.0
This package is tested with GitHub Actions using MySQL 5.7, PostgreSQL 10.8 and SQLite.
- Flip/invert your scope, or really any query constraint.
- Zero third-party dependencies.
Related package: Laravel Eloquent Scope as Select
If you want to know more about the background of this package, please read the blogpost: Apply the opposite of your Eloquent scope to the Query Builder with a Laravel package.
You can install the package via composer:
composer require protonemedia/laravel-eloquent-where-not
Add the macro
to the query builder, for example, in your AppServiceProvider
. By default, the name of the macro is whereNot
, but you can customize it with the first parameter of the addMacro
method.
use ProtoneMedia\LaravelEloquentWhereNot\WhereNot;
public function boot()
{
WhereNot::addMacro();
// or use a custom method name:
WhereNot::addMacro('not');
}
For a more practical explanation, check out the usage section below.
Call the whereNot
method with a Closure:
Post::whereNot(function ($query) {
$query->onFrontPage();
})->get();
The example above can be shortened by using a string, which should be the name of the scope:
Post::whereNot('onFrontPage')->get();
You can use an array to call multiple scopes:
Post::whereNot(['popular', 'published'])->get();
Use an associative array to call dynamic scopes:
Post::whereNot(['ofType' => 'announcement'])->get();
If your dynamic scopes require multiple arguments, you can use an associative array:
Post::whereNot(['publishedBetween' => [2010, 2020]])->get();
You can also mix dynamic and non-dynmaic scopes:
Post::whereNot([
'published',
'ofType' => 'announcement'
])->get();
Imagine you have a Post
Eloquent model with a query scope that constraints the query to all posts that should make the front page.
class Post extends Model
{
public function user()
{
return $this->belongsTo(User::class);
}
public function comments()
{
return $this->hasMany(Comment::class);
}
public function scopeOnFrontPage($query)
{
$query->where('is_public', 1)
->where('votes', '>', 100)
->has('comments', '>=', 20)
->whereHas('user', fn($user) => $user->isAdmin())
->whereYear('published_at', date('Y'));
}
}
Now you can fetch all posts for your front page by calling the scope method on the query:
$posts = Post::onFrontPage()->get();
But what if you want to fetch all posts that didn't make the front page? Using the power of this package, you can re-use your scope!
$posts = Post::whereNot(function($query) {
$query->onFrontPage();
})->get();
With short closures, a feature which was introduced in PHP 7.4, this can be even shorter:
$posts = Post::whereNot(fn ($query) => $query->onFrontPage())->get();
Instead of using a Closure, there are some shortcuts you could use (see also: Short API description):
Using a string instead of a Closure:
Post::whereNot(function ($query) {
$query->published();
});
// is the same as:
Post::whereNot('published');
Using an array instead of Closure, to support multiple scopes and dynamic scopes:
Post::whereNot(function ($query) {
$query->ofType('announcement');
});
// is the same as:
Post::whereNot(['ofType' => 'announcement']);
composer test
Please see CHANGELOG for more information about what has changed recently.
Please see CONTRIBUTING for details.
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The MIT License (MIT). Please see License File for more information.
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