Alerts for Laravel (v5 to v12) Global site messages in Laravel. Helps trigger notification bubbles with a simple API, both in the current page, and in the next page (using flash data). Table of Contents Installation Configuration Usage Adding Alerts Adding Alerts Through Alert Levels Flashing Alerts To The Session Displaying Alerts Changelog License Installation You can install the package for your Laravel 6+ project through Composer. $ composer require prologue/alerts For Laravel 5.4 and below, register the service provider in app/config/app.php. 'Prologue\Alerts\AlertsServiceProvider', Add the alias to the list of aliases in app/config/app.php. 'Alert' => 'Prologue\Alerts\Facades\Alert', Configuration The packages provides you with some configuration options. To create the configuration file, run this command in your command line app: $ php artisan vendor:publish --provider="Prologue\Alerts\AlertsServiceProvider" The configuration file will be published here: config/prologue/alerts.php. Usage Adding Alerts Since the main AlertsMessageBag class which powers the package is an extension of Illuminate's MessageBag class, we can leverage its functionality to easily add messages. Alert::add('error', 'Error message'); Adding Alerts Through Alert Levels By default, the package has some alert levels defined in its configuration file. The default levels are success, error, warning and info. The AlertsMessageBag checks if you call one of these levels as a function and registers your alert which you provided with the correct key. This makes adding alerts for certain alert types very easy: Alert::info('This is an info message.'); Alert::error('Whoops, something has gone wrong.'); You can of course add your own alert levels by adding them to your own config file. See above on how to publish the config file. Flashing Alerts To The Session Sometimes you want to remember alerts when you're, for example, redirecting to another route. This can be done by calling the flash method. The AlertsMessageBag class will put the current set alerts into the current session which can then be used after the redirect. // Add some alerts and flash them to the session. Alert::success('You have successfully logged in')->flash(); // Redirect to the admin dashboard. return Redirect::to('dashboard'); // Display the alerts in the admin dashboard view. return View::make('dashboard')->with('alerts', Alert::all()); Displaying Alerts Remember that the AlertsMessageBag class is just an extension of Illuminate's MessageBag class, which means we can use all of its functionality to display messages. @foreach (Alert::all() as $alert) {{ $alert }} @endforeach Or if you'd like to display a single alert for a certain alert level. @if (Alert::has('success')) {{ Alert::first('success') }} @endif Display all messages for each alert level: @foreach (Alert::getMessages() as $type => $messages) @foreach ($messages as $message) <div class="alert alert-{{ $type }}">{{ $message }}</div> @endforeach @endforeach Checking For Alerts Sometimes it can be important to see if alert's do exist, such as only load javascript/styles if they are there are some (helps for better performance). You can check if there are any errors. Alert::has(); // Will check for any alerts Alert::has('error'); // Will check for any alerts listed as errors. You can also get the current number of alerts. Alert::count(); // Will give you a total count of all alerts based on all levels within your alerts config. Alert::count('error'); // Will tell you only the amount of errors and exclude any levels. If you'd like to learn more ways on how you can display messages, please take a closer look to Illuminate's MessageBag class. Credits Created by Dries Vints - he first got the idea after a blog post by Todd Francis. This package uses much of the concepts of his blog post as well as the concept of alert levels which Illuminate's Log package uses. Maintained by Cristian Tabacitu thanks to its use in Backpack for Laravel. Changelog You view the changelog for this package here. License Prologue Alerts is licensed under the MIT License.