This article explains how to define custom options for any entity property and
how to use those options in the list
, search
or show
views. This technique
is useful for complex or highly customized backends, but it should be used
sparingly because it could require you some maintenance work when new versions
of this bundle are released.
Properties included in the fields
option of any entity can define several
options (property
, label
, template
, type
, help
and css_class
):
# app/config.yml
easy_admin:
entities:
User:
class: AppBundle\Entity\User
list:
fields:
- { property: 'email', label: 'Contact' }
- { property: 'biography', help: 'Markdown allowed' }
# ...
Adding custom options is as simple as defining their names and values in each
property configuration. Imagine that you want to translate the contents of a
property called name
in the list
view. To do so, define a custom option
called trans
which indicates if the property should be translated and another
option called domain
which defines the name of the translation domain to use:
# app/config.yml
Product:
class: AppBundle\Entity\Product
label: 'Products'
list:
fields:
- id
- { property: 'name', trans: true, domain: 'messages' }
# ...
Property templates receive a parameter called field_options
which is an array
that contains all the options defined in the configuration file for that
property. If you add custom options, they will also be available in that
field_options
parameter. This allows you to add custom logic to templates very
easily.
Considering that the name
property is of type string
, override the built-in
field_string.html.twig
templateto add support for the trans
and domain
options:
{# app/Resources/views/easy_admin/field_string.html.twig #}
{% if field_options.trans|default(false) %}
{# translate fields defined as "translatable" #}
{{ value|trans({}, field_options.domain|default('messages')) }}
{% else %}
{# if not translatable, simply include the default template #}
{{ include('@EasyAdmin/default/field_string.html.twig') }}
{% endif %}
If the custom logic is too complex, it may be better to render the property with its own custom template to not mess the default templates too much. In the following example, the backend wants to display a collection of tags with the colors configured for the property.
Since this business logic is too specific, it's better to not reuse the
corresponding default template. The solution is to define a custom template just
for this property and make use of the label_colors
custom option:
# app/config.yml
easy_admin:
entities:
Product:
class: AppBundle\Entity\Product
list:
fields:
# ...
- { property: 'tags', template: 'tag_collection.html.twig',
label_colors: ['primary', 'success', 'info'] }
The custom tag_collection.html.twig
template would look as follows:
{# app/Resources/views/easy_admin/tag_collection.html.twig #}
{% set colors = field_options.label_colors|default(['primary']) %}
{% for tag in value %}
<span class="label label-{{ cycle(colors, loop.index) }}">{{ tag }}</span>
{% endfor %}
And this property would be rendered in the list
view as follows:
This very same technique can be applied to entities too. Since the configuration options are not constrained, you can add as many custom entity properties as needed. Just define their name and value to use them everywhere on the backend:
# app/config.yml
easy_admin:
entities:
User:
class: AppBundle\Entity\User
export_path: '%kernel.root_dir/../var/export/user'
password_encoding: { algorithm: 'bcrypt', cost: 12 }
# ...
In the above example, the backend defines the export_path
and password_encoding
custom options, which will be included by EasyAdmin in the processed User
configuration.
Instead of defining the custom options at the same level of the built-in options, it's better to define them under a custom parent option. This eases the maintenance of your custom options and reduces the risk of option name collisions. You can even use the name of your project as the name of the parent option:
# app/config.yml
easy_admin:
entities:
User:
class: AppBundle\Entity\User
acme_project:
export_path: '%kernel.root_dir/../var/export/user'
password_encoding: { algorithm: 'bcrypt', cost: 12 }
# ...