stellarwp / field-conditions
A set of serializable classes for handling conditional logic for fields in PHP
Installs: 269 004
Dependents: 1
Suggesters: 0
Security: 0
Stars: 2
Watchers: 8
Forks: 0
Open Issues: 0
Requires
- ext-json: *
Requires (Dev)
- codeception/module-asserts: ^1.0.0
- codeception/module-phpbrowser: ^1.0.0
- lucatume/wp-browser: ^3.0.14
- phpunit/phpunit: ~6.0
This package is auto-updated.
Last update: 2024-10-31 00:21:44 UTC
README
This is a small PHP library for defining and processing field conditions. By "field" conditions we're referring to conditions for use with a set of fields, such as a form. A field condition consists of a field name, a comparison operator, the value to compare against, and the logical operator to use when combining multiple conditions. For example:
$condition = new FieldCondition('name', '=', 'John', 'and');
This condition would be true if the value of the field named "name" is equal to "John".
Finally, all conditions can be serialized into JSON. The intended scenario is for passing
said conditions to the front-end to be used in JavaScript. Simply use the json_encode()
function to serialize the condition or condition set.
Installation
It is recommended to install this library using Composer. To do so, run the following command:
composer require stellarwp/field-conditions
If using this in WordPress, it is strongly recommended that you use Strauss to avoid conflicts with other plugins.
Configuration
The library includes a Config
class which can be used for setting configuration options. At
this time, the only configuration is the ability to override the InvalidArgumentException
, in
case you need your own exception to be used here.
use StellarWP\FieldConditions\Config; Config::setInvalidArgumentExceptionClass(MyInvalidArgumentException::class);
How to use
Typically, conditions will be stored within a ConditionSet
object. This object tracks the
conditions and provides methods for determining whether the conditions pass or fail a given
set of data.
There are two types of conditions:
FieldCondition
- A condition that compares a field value to a given value.NestedCondition
- A condition that contains other conditions.
There are two types of condition sets:
SimpleConditionSet
- A flat set of FieldConditionsComplexConditionSet
- An infinitely deep set of FieldConditions and NestedConditions
Defining your conditions
First, you will want to instantiate your condition set. If you only want a flat set of conditions
that cannot be nested, then use a SimpleConditionSet
. Otherwise, use a ComplexConditionSet
.
Next, you can pass your conditions to the condition set:
use StellarWP\FieldConditions\ComplexConditionSet; use StellarWP\FieldConditions\FieldCondition; use StellarWP\FieldConditions\NestedCondition; use StellarWP\FieldConditions\SimpleConditionSet; $simpleSet = new SimpleConditionSet(); // you can pass conditions here as well $simpleSet ->where('name', '=', 'John') ->and('age', '>', 18) ->or('age', '<', 5); // Logically: name = 'John' AND age > 18 OR (name = 'Jane' AND age > 21) $complexSet = new ComplexConditionSet(); $complexSet ->where('name', '=', 'John') ->and('age', '>', 18) ->or(function(NestedCondition $condition) { $condition ->where('name', '=', 'Jane') ->and('age', '>', 21); });
Condition instances can also be passed to the where
, and
, and or
methods. Note that the
logical operator in the condition will be overwritten by the method used.
$conditionSet = new SimpleConditionSet(); $nestedCondition = new NestedCondition(); $conditionSet ->where(new FieldCondition('name', '=', 'John')); ->and($nestedCondition);
It's also possible to append conditions to an existing condition set:
$conditionSet = new SimpleConditionSet(); $conditionSet->append( new FieldCondition('name', '=', 'John'), new FieldCondition('age', '>', 18) );
Checking values against conditions
Once you have your condition set, you will want to pass values to the condition set to check whether the given data passes the set of conditions.
$data = [ 'name' => 'John', 'age' => 19, ]; $simpleSet ->where('name', '=', 'John') ->and('age', '>', 18); $conditionSet->passes($data); // true $conditionSet->fails($data); // false
A note about logical operators (and/or) in conditions
One thing that may be confusing is how logical operations work in conditions. Consider the following:
$conditionSet = new SimpleConditionSet( new FieldCondition('name', '=', 'John'), new FieldCondition('age', '>', 18, 'or') );
Logically, this reads as "name equals John OR age is greater than 18". What makes this feel strange is that the logical operator appears at the end of the second condition. This makes it feel like the OR is being applied to the end of the second condition. In reality, the OR is being applied to the start of the condition.
The logical operator is applied to the start of the condition, as the logical operation applies to
the current condition, not the next. This is why the typical way to write the sets is using the
where()
, and()
, and or()
methods, so it feels more natural.
Lastly, the default logical operator is AND, so it is only necessary to specify the logical operator when using OR.