A very small package which helps you to easily returning readable API responses.
Install the package via Composer.
composer require dees040/laravel-api-responses
You're ready to go!
Just use one of the helper functions and you're good to go.
<?php
namespace App\Http\Controllers;
use App\User;
use App\Http\Controllers\Controller;
class UsersController extends Controller
{
/**
* Show the given user.
*
* @param \App\User $user
* @return \Illuminate\Http\Response
*/
public function show(User $user)
{
if (! $user->isAdmin()) {
return forbidden();
}
return ok($user);
}
}
All methods accept a $data
parameter. This can be any data which can be used in a JSON response, such as strings, integers, arrays, models, etc..
Method | Status Code |
---|---|
ok($data) |
200 |
created($data) |
201 |
accepted($data) |
202 |
no_content() |
204 |
bad_request($message, $errors) |
400 |
unauthenticated($message, $errors) |
401 |
forbidden($message, $errors) |
403 |
not_found($message, $errors) |
404 |
method_not_allowed($message, $errors) |
405 |
not_acceptable($message, $errors) |
406 |
teapot($message, $errors) |
418 |
unprocessable_entity($message, $errors) |
422 |
If you'd wish to send a status code which is not in the list you could use the json_response($data = null, $status = 200)
helper function. Here you can find a cheat sheet for HTTP status codes or use my personal favorite http.cat 😉.
If you want to send error response you can use the error_json_response($message = '', $errors = [], $status = 400)
. This method will send an json response like this:
error_json_response('User not found.', [
'id' => 'The ID does not exists.'
]);
Output:
{
"message": "User not found.",
"errors": {
"id": "The ID does not exists."
}
}