Laravel One to One Eloquent Relationship Tutorial and Example
Code And Deploy
Posted on May 16, 2022
Originally posted @ https://codeanddeploy.com visit and download the sample code:
https://codeanddeploy.com/blog/laravel/laravel-one-to-one-eloquent-relationship-tutorial-and-example
In this tutorial, you will learn to implement the Laravel 8 one to one relationship. One-to-one model relation in Laravel is the basic relationship that we usually encounter when doing the Laravel project. If you're new to Laravel this tutorial is for you. I will show you an example that is easy to understand and may help you in your future projects on Laravel.
In this example, we will use the users
table and user_contact_infos
table and these tables are connected which the user has a user contact info with the use of user_id
key inside user_contact_infos
table.
To start we need to create first our tables for our one-to-one relationship using Laravel eloquent.
Step 1: Create Migration
Since in default the Laravel installations have a users table already we will just skip it and run the migration for our user_contact_infos
table.
Run the following command:
php artisan make:migration create_user_contact_infos_table
Here is the complete code below:
<?php
use Illuminate\Database\Migrations\Migration;
use Illuminate\Database\Schema\Blueprint;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Schema;
class CreateUserContactInfosTable extends Migration
{
/**
* Run the migrations.
*
* @return void
*/
public function up()
{
Schema::create('user_contact_infos', function (Blueprint $table) {
$table->id();
$table->unsignedBigInteger('user_id');
$table->string('city');
$table->string('phone');
$table->timestamps();
});
}
/**
* Reverse the migrations.
*
* @return void
*/
public function down()
{
Schema::dropIfExists('user_contact_infos');
}
}
For the sake of this tutorial I will show you also the code for users table migration:
<?php
use Illuminate\Database\Migrations\Migration;
use Illuminate\Database\Schema\Blueprint;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Schema;
class CreateUsersTable extends Migration
{
/**
* Run the migrations.
*
* @return void
*/
public function up()
{
Schema::create('users', function (Blueprint $table) {
$table->id();
$table->string('name');
$table->string('email')->unique();
$table->timestamp('email_verified_at')->nullable();
$table->string('password');
$table->rememberToken();
$table->timestamps();
});
}
/**
* Reverse the migrations.
*
* @return void
*/
public function down()
{
Schema::dropIfExists('users');
}
}
Step 2: Laravel One to One Models
Now let's set up our User.php
a model since it is already included in the installation we don't need to run a command:
See below code:
<?php
namespace App\Models;
use App\Models\UserContactInfo;
use Laravel\Sanctum\HasApiTokens;
use Illuminate\Notifications\Notifiable;
use Illuminate\Contracts\Auth\MustVerifyEmail;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Factories\HasFactory;
use Illuminate\Foundation\Auth\User as Authenticatable;
class User extends Authenticatable
{
use HasApiTokens, HasFactory, Notifiable;
/**
* The attributes that are mass assignable.
*
* @var array<int, string>
*/
protected $fillable = [
'name',
'email',
'password',
];
/**
* The attributes that should be hidden for serialization.
*
* @var array<int, string>
*/
protected $hidden = [
'password',
'remember_token',
];
/**
* The attributes that should be cast.
*
* @var array<string, string>
*/
protected $casts = [
'email_verified_at' => 'datetime',
];
/**
* Get the phone record associated with the user.
*/
public function user_contact_info()
{
return $this->hasOne(UserContactInfo::class);
}
}
As you can see above we added the user_contact_info()
method for hasOne()
which is the name of our related model class.
Now let's create a UserContactInfo.php
model. Run the following command:
php artisan make:model UserContactInfo
Here is the complete code below of our UserContactInfo
model.
<?php
namespace App\Models;
use App\Models\User;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Factories\HasFactory;
class UserContactInfo extends Model
{
use HasFactory;
/**
* Get the user that owns the contact info.
*/
public function user()
{
return $this->belongsTo(User::class);
}
}
As you can see we added user()
a method with belongsTo()
method. It will automatically attempt to find a User model that has an id that matches the user_id column on the UserContactInfo
model.
Now we have already set up our Laravel one-to-one relationship models. Let's try to create some data for this.
Step 3: Create Data on Laravel One to One Relationship
In this section, we will create users with user contact info to test our Laravel one-to-one relationship.
Creating user's record.
// Create User
$user = new User;
$user->name = 'Juan Dela Cruz';
$user->email = 'juan@gmail.com';
$user->password = bcrypt('password');
$user->save();
$user = new User;
$user->name = 'Juana Santa Cruz';
$user->email = 'juana@gmail.com';
$user->password = bcrypt('password');
$user->save();
Creating user contact info.
$user = User::find(1);
$userContactInfo = new UserContactInfo;
$userContactInfo->city = 'Bayawan City';
$userContactInfo->phone = '09261234567';
$user->user_contact_info()->save($userContactInfo);
If you have the same user contact info and want to use it by the other user then the code below will be applied.
$userContactInfo = UserContactInfo::find(1);
$user = User::find(2);
$userContactInfo->user()->associate($user)->save();
Step 4: Retrieve Laravel One to One Relationship
Now let's retrieve the records using Laravel one-to-one relationship. See the below example.
$userContactInfo = User::find(1)->user_contact_info;
dd($userContactInfo);
I hope this tutorial can help you. Kindly visit here https://codeanddeploy.com/blog/laravel/laravel-one-to-one-eloquent-relationship-tutorial-and-example if you want to download this code.
Happy coding :)
Posted on May 16, 2022
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