This package provides a cursor based pagination already integrated with Laravel's query builder and Eloquent ORM. It calculates the SQL query limits automatically by checking the requests GET parameters, and automatically builds the next and previous urls for you.
You can install this package via composer using:
composer require juampi92/cursor-pagination
The package will automatically register itself.
To publish the config file to config/cursor_pagination.php
run:
php artisan vendor:publish --provider="Juampi92\CursorPagination\CursorPaginationServiceProvider" --tag="config"
This will publish the following file. You can customize the name of the GET parameters, as well as the default items per page.
The main idea behind a cursor pagination is that it needs a context to know what results to show next.
So instead of saying page=2
, you say next_cursor=10
. The result is the same as the old fashioned page pagination,
but now you have more control on the output, cause next_cursor=10
should always return the same (unless some records are deleted).
This kind of pagination is useful when you sort using the latest first, so you can keep an infinite scroll using next_cursor
whenever you get to the bottom,
or do a previous_cursor
whenever you need to refresh the list at the top, and if you send the first cursor,
the results will only fetch the new ones.
- New rows don't affect the result, so no duplicated results when paginating.
- Filtering by an indexed cursor is way faster that using database offset.
- Using previous cursor to avoid duplicating the first elements.
- No previous page, although the browser still has them.
- No navigating to arbitrary pages (you must know the previous result to know the next ones).
Basically, it's perfect for infinite scrolling!
There are several ways to paginate items.
The simplest is by using the cursorPaginate
method on the query builder or an Eloquent query.
The cursorPaginate
method automatically takes care of setting the proper limit and fetching the next or
previous elements based on the cursor being viewed by the user.
By default, the cursor
is detected by the value of the page query string argument on the HTTP request.
This value is automatically detected by the package taking your custom config into account, and is also automatically inserted into links and meta generated by the paginator.
public function index()
{
$users = DB::table('users')->cursorPaginate();
return $users;
}
You may also paginate Eloquent queries. In this example, we will paginate the User
model
with 15
items per page. As you can see, the syntax is identical to paginating query builder results:
$users = User::cursorPaginate(15);
Of course, you may call paginate after setting other constraints on the query, such as where clauses:
$users = User::where('votes', '>', 100)->cursorPaginate(15);
Or sorting your results:
$users = User::orderBy('id', 'desc')->cursorPaginate(15);
Don't worry, the package will detect if the model's primary key is being used for sorting, and it will adapt itself so the next and previous work as expected.
The paginator identifier is basically the cursor attribute. The model's attribute that will be used for paginating. It's really important that this identifier is unique on the results. Duplicated identifiers could cause that some records are not showed, so be careful.
If the query is not sorted by the identifier, the cursor pagination might not work as expected.
If no identifier is defined, the cursor will try to figure it out by itself. First, it will check if there's any orderBy clause.
If there is, it will take the first column that is sorted and will use that.
If there is not any orderBy clause, it will check if it's an Eloquent model, and will use it's primaryKey
(by default it's 'id').
And if it's not an Eloquent Model, it'll use id
.
// Will use Booking's primaryKey
Bookings::cursorPaginate(10);
// Will use hardcoded 'id'
DB::table('bookings')->cursorPaginate(10);
// Will use 'created_by'
Bookings::orderBy('created_by', 'asc')
->cursorPaginate(10);
Just define the identifier
option
// Will use _id, ignoring everything else.
Bookings::cursorPaginate(10, ['*'], [
'identifier' => '_id'
]);
By default, the identifier is the model's primaryKey (or id
in case it's not an Eloquent model) so there are no duplicates,
but you can adjust this by passing a custom identifier
option. In case that specified identifier is casted to date or datetime
on Eloquent's $casts
property, the paginator will convert it into unix timestamp for you.
You can also specify it manually by adding a [ 'date_identifier' => true ]
option.
Using Eloquent (make sure Booking Model has protected $casts = ['datetime' => 'datetime'];
)
// It will autodetect 'datetime' as identifier,
// and will detect it's casted to datetime.
Bookings::orderBy('datetime', 'asc')
->cursorPaginate(10);
Using Query
// It will autodetect 'datetime' as identifier,
// but since there is no model, you'll have to
// specify the 'date_identifier' option to `true`
DB::table('bookings')
->orderBy('datetime', 'asc')
->cursorPaginate(10, ['*'], [
'date_identifier' => true
]);
You should know that CursorPaginator inherits from Laravel's AbstractPaginator, so methods like
withPath
, appends
, fragment
are available, so you can use those to build the url,
but you should know that the default url creation of this package includes query params that you
might already have.
A basic return will transform the paginator to JSON and will have a result like this:
Route::get('api/v1', function () {
return App\User::cursorPaginate();
});
Calling api/v1
will output:
{
"path": "api/v1?",
"previous_cursor": "10",
"next_cursor": "3",
"per_page": 3,
"next_page_url": "api/v1?next_cursor=3",
"prev_page_url": "api/v1?previous_cursor=1",
"data": [
{}
]
}
By default, Laravel's API Resources when using them as collections, they will output a paginator's metadata
into links
and meta
.
{
"data":[
{}
],
"links": {
"first": null,
"last": null,
"prev": "api/v1?previous_cursor=1",
"next": "api/v1?next_cursor=3"
},
"meta": {
"path": "api/v1?",
"previous_cursor": "1",
"next_cursor": "3",
"per_page": 3
}
}
It's important to clarify that the previous cursor does NOT work like the next one. The next cursor makes the paginator return the elements that follow that cursor.
So in the case of the next cursor being 10
, that pagination should return next + 1
, next + 2
, next + 3
.
So that works as expected.
The previous cursor though it's not prev - 1
, prev - 2
, prev - 3
. No. It does not return the adjacent elements, or the 'context' for that cursor.
What it does instead is pretty interesting:
Let's assume we do a simple fetch and it returns elements [10, 9, 8]
. If we do a prev=10
, it will return empty, cause
those are the first elements. So if we now add 5 more to that: from the 15 to the 11, and we do prev=10
again, the
result will be [15, 14, 13]
. NOT [13, 12 ,11]
.
That's because previous works like a filter. It shows the first 'per_page' items that are before that cursor. The order is the same as in the next cursor, so it fetches the latest ones.
The same logic can be used when combining cursors: next=13&prev=10
will output the missing two elements: [12, 11]
, so you can complete the list without fetching any extra items.
With this plugin you can specify the perPage number by many ways.
You can set the cursor_pagination.per_page
config, so if you don't send any parameters, it will use that as the default.
You can also use an array. The purpose of the array declaration is to separate whenever it's a previous cursor, or a next / default cursor. This way, when you do a 'refresh', you can fetch more results than if you are simply scrolling.
To configure that, set $perPage = [15, 5]
. That way it'll fetch 15 when you do a previous_cursor
, and 5 when you do a normal fetch or a next_cursor
.
On the config, change identifier_name
to change the word cursor
. Examples: cursor
, id
, pointer
, etc.
Change navigation_names
to change the words ['previous', 'next']
.
Examples: ['before', 'after']
, ['min', 'max']
Edit transform_name
to format the string differently:
- For
previousCursor
use 'camel_case' - For
previous-cursor
use 'kebab_case'. - For
previous_cursor
use 'snake_case'.
Using null
defaults to camelCase.
new CursorPaginator(array|collection $items, array|int $perPage, array options = [
// Attribute used for choosing the cursor. Used primaryKey on Eloquent Models as default.
'identifier' => 'id',
'identifier_alias' => 'id',
'date_identifier' => false,
'path' => request()->path(),
]);
(The items must have a $item->{$identifier} property.)
Eloquent Builder and Query Builder's macro:
cursorPaginate(array|int $perPage, array $cols = ['*'], array options = []): CursorPaginator;
$resutls->hasMorePages(): bool;
$results->nextCursor(): string|null;
$results->prevCursor(): string|null;
$results->previousPageUrl(): string|null;
$results->nextPageUrl(): string|null;
$results->url(['next' => 1]): string;
$results->count(): int;
Note: all cursors are casted as strings.
Sometimes we need to use the paginator on a JOIN query. This might have duplicated columns, so we have to specify one for the sorting.
Since Mysql doesn't allow us to use a selector alias on a WHERE condition, we have to use the table
.column
name instead.
$following = $user->following()
->orderBy('follows.created_at', 'desc')
->cursorPaginate(10, ['*'], [
'date_identifier' => true,
'identifier' => 'follows.created_at',
'identifier_alias' => 'created_at',
]);
By default, the package will guess that the identifier_alias
is the column name you specify,
so if you order by follows.created_at
, it will try to use the models created_at
as identifier (by using the alias).
Run the tests with:
vendor/bin/phpunit
The MIT License (MIT). Please see License File for more information.