Shishant
Shishant

Reputation: 9294

CodeIgniter global variable

I am using $data in all my views $this->load->view('my_view', $data);

I have also autoload a Controller following this guide Extending Core Controller

But I want to make $data global because in views there is a sidebar which is constant for whole project and displays info fetched through db in autoloaded controller

Currently I have to manually write $data['todo'] for each and fetch info from autoloaded model.

Thank You.

Upvotes: 11

Views: 33197

Answers (4)

pkdkk
pkdkk

Reputation: 3963

I used a helper function to call a global function!

eg.

function get_user($userid){
    $CI =& get_instance();

    $query = $CI->db->get_where('users', array('id' => $userid), 1, 0);
    foreach ($query->result() as $row){
        // Return a object with userdata!
        return $row;
    }
}

Now I have access to my userdata everywhere..

Upvotes: 1

Shishant
Shishant

Reputation: 9294

1: Create MY_Controller in application/libraries with following:

class MY_Controller extends Controller {  
  var $data;      
  //constructor function              
}

2: Replace Controller to MY_Controller in all your controller files and load views with $this->data

class Contact extends Controller { //to.. } 

class Contact extends MY_Controller { 
 $this->load->view('contact_view', $this->data);
}

this way you can perform default functions that are applicable for whole site in MY_Controller like loading settings.

Upvotes: 17

Stephen Curran
Stephen Curran

Reputation: 7433

Rather than making the view data global, I'd recommend using HMVC to build a module to produce this sidebar view. HMVC is a nice clean way of coding partial views.

Upvotes: -1

stormdrain
stormdrain

Reputation: 7895

I ran into a similar problem earlier today. I found that an easier way, rather than globals, was to use constants. You can define a constants file that will load from your index.php file:

// Include additional constants
$defines_file = 'includes/defines.php';
if (file_exists($defines_file))
{
    require_once($defines_file);
} 

Then you can add your constants to the defines.php file:

define(MY_CONSTANT,'my constant info');

This way they will be available in any file throughout the system either directly: echo MY_CONSTANT; or you can assign them to variables.

I decided this way would be easier for me as I would only have 1 location to go to when/if I needed to change the constants.

More: http://codeigniter.com/forums/viewthread/56981/#280205

Upvotes: 5

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