KnpMenu provides 2 different (and complementary) integrations with Twig:
MenuExtension: a Twig extension allowing you to easily render menus from within a Twig template
TwigRenderer: a Twig renderer that (behind the scenes) uses a Twig template to render the menu
The easiest (but not best) way to render a menu inside a Twig template is to pass both the renderer and menu into a template:
<?php
// bootstrap Twig
$twigLoader = new \Twig_Loader_Filesystem(array(
// path to your templates
));
$twig = new \Twig_Environment($twigLoader);
$itemMatcher = new \Knp\Menu\Matcher\Matcher();
// setup some renderer
$renderer = new \Knp\Menu\Renderer\ListRenderer($itemMatcher);
//$menuRenderer = new \Knp\Menu\Renderer\TwigRenderer($twig, 'knp_menu.html.twig', $itemMatcher);
// render a template
$template = $twig->loadTemplate('menu.twig');
echo $template->display(array(
'renderer' => $renderer,
'menu' => $menu
));
To render the menu, your template would look like this:
{{ renderer.render(menu) | raw }}
This is ok, but there is a better way. By configuring all of your renderers and menus in a central location, you can use a convenient and shorthand syntax to render your menus inside a Twig template.
To make life simpler, a good option is to centralize the setup of all of
your renderers. To do this, you'll need to create a "renderer provider", which
is some object - implementing Knp\Menu\Renderer\RendererProviderInterface
-
which acts like a container for all of your renderers.
The default implementation of the renderer provider is based on Pimple so that your renderers can be lazy-loaded.
<?php
// setup pimple, and assign the renderer to "menu_renderer"
$pimple = new \Pimple();
$itemMatcher = \Knp\Menu\Matcher\Matcher();
$pimple['list_renderer'] = function() {
return new \Knp\Menu\Renderer\ListRenderer($itemMatcher);
};
$rendererProvider = new \Knp\Menu\Renderer\PimpleProvider(
$pimple,
// common name of the renderer used by default
'main',
// common name for the renderer => name of the renderer in pimple
array('main' => 'list_renderer')
);
$helper = new \Knp\Menu\Twig\Helper($rendererProvider);
$menuExtension = new \Knp\Menu\Twig\MenuExtension($helper);
$twig->addExtension($menuExtension);
Now, the renderer is aliased to the name main
. You can render the menu
with the default renderer simply via:
{{ knp_menu_render(menu) }}
In this example, menu
variable is the MenuItem
object you've passed
into your template.
You can also pass options when rendering the template:
{{ knp_menu_render(menu, {'currentAsLink': false, 'compressed': true}) }}
You can also use another renderer than the default one by passing its name:
{{ knp_menu_render(menu, {}, 'main') }}
The Twig extension allow you to retrieve an item in your menu tree by its path (the name of the item is used in the path):
{# The menu variable contains a Knp\Menu\ItemInterface object #}
{% set item = knp_menu_get(menu, ['Comment', 'My comments']) %}
{# The following could be used but would throw a Fatal Error for some invalid
paths instead of an exception: #}
{% set item = menu['Comment']['My comments'] %}
{# actually render the part of the menu #}
{{ knp_menu_render(item) }}
NOTE An InvalidArgumentException will be thrown if the path is invalid.
Using the path is also supported when using the knp_menu_render
function
by using an array:
{# The menu variable contains a Knp\Menu\ItemInterface object #}
{{ knp_menu_render([menu, 'Comment', 'My comments']) }}
The MenuExtension also supports retrieving the menus from a provider implementing
Knp\Menu\Provider\MenuProviderInterface
which works the same way as the
RendererProviderInterface
. The default implementation is also based on
Pimple.
<?php
$factory = new MenuFactory();
$pimple = new \Pimple();
// setup the renderer(s) in Pimple
$pimple['menu_main'] = function() use ($factory) {
$menu = $factory->createItem('My menu');
// setup the menu
return $menu;
};
$pimple['menu_sidebar'] = ... //
// $rendererProvider = ...
$menuProvider = new \Knp\Menu\Provider\PimpleProvider(
$pimple,
array('main' => 'main_menu', 'sidebar' => 'menu_sidebar')
);
$helper = new \Knp\Menu\Twig\Helper($rendererProvider, $menuProvider);
$menuExtension = new \Knp\Menu\Twig\MenuExtension($helper);
You can now retrieve the menu by its name in the template:
{% set menu = knp_menu_get('sidebar') %}
{# The menu variable now contains a Knp\Menu\ItemInterface object #}
When a menu provider is set, you can also use the menu name instead of the menu object in the other functions:
{{ knp_menu_render('main', {'depth': 1}) }}
{{ knp_menu_render(['main', 'Comments', 'My comments'], {'depth': 2}) }}
{% set item = knp_menu_get('sidebar', ['First section']) %}
In some cases, you may want to build the menu differently according to the
place it is used. As of KnpMenu 1.1, the knp_menu_get
function supports
passing an array of options for the menu provider.
To be able to use these options in the Pimple provide, you should register
the menu as a factory closure through $pimple->protect()
. It will then
be called with the array of options as first argument and the pimple instance
as second argument:
<?php
$factory = new MenuFactory();
$pimple = new \Pimple();
// setup the renderer(s) in Pimple
$pimple['menu_main'] = $pimple->protect(function(array $options, $c) use ($factory) {
$menu = $factory->createItem('My menu');
// setup the menu
// you can use the options you passed to the provider
// and access the pimple container for this.
return $menu;
});
To use the TwigRenderer, you need to add the path of the template in the loader when bootstrapping Twig.
<?php
$twigLoader = new \Twig_Loader_Filesystem(array(
__DIR__.'/vendor/KnpMenu/src/Knp/Menu/Resources/views',
// your own paths
));
$twig = new \Twig_Environment($twigLoader);
$itemMatcher = \Knp\Menu\Matcher\Matcher();
$menuRenderer = new \Knp\Menu\Renderer\TwigRenderer($twig, 'knp_menu.html.twig', $itemMatcher);
This works just like any other renderer, and will output an un-ordered list
of menu items (e.g. ul
and li
elements):
<?php
echo $menuRenderer->render($menu);
Behind the scenes, the renderer is using a Twig template to render the menu. This template can be customized by you.
NOTE A second template named
knp_menu_ordered.html.twig
can be used if you want to render the menu using an ordered list. This template extends the previous one which must be available using theknp_menu.html.twig
name (which is the case when configuring the loader like previously).
If you need to customize how the template is rendered - beyond all of the options given to you by modifying the menu items themselves - you can customize the Twig template that renders the menu.
You can change the template used to render the menu in two different ways:
1) Globally: Change the second argument passed to the constructor of the renderer.
2) Locally: Pass a template
option when rendering the menu
<?php
echo $menuRenderer->render($menu, array('template' => 'my_menu.html.twig'));
The template needs to contain 2 blocks: root
and compressed_root
which
are used to display the root of the menu. The easiest way to customize the
rendering is to extend the built-in template and to replace the block you
want.
NOTE The built-in templates contains some additional blocks to make it easier to customize it when using the inheritance.