StimulusBundle: Symfony integration with Stimulus
Tip
Check out live demos of Symfony UX at https://ux.symfony.com!
This bundle adds integration between Symfony, Stimulus and the Symfony UX packages:
- Twig
stimulus_
functions & filters to add Stimulus controllers, - actions & targets in your templates;
- Twig
- Integration to load UX Packages (extra Stimulus controllers)
Installation
First, if you don't have one yet, choose and install an asset handling system; both work great with StimulusBundle:
- AssetMapper: PHP-based system for handling assets
or
- Webpack Encore Node-based packaging system
See Encore vs AssetMapper to learn which is best for your project.
Next, install the bundle:
1
$ composer require symfony/stimulus-bundle
If you're using Symfony Flex, you're done! The recipe will update the necessary files. If not, or you're curious, see Manual Setup.
Tip
If you're using Encore, be sure to install your assets (e.g. npm install
)
and restart Encore.
Usage
You can now create custom Stimulus controllers inside of the assets/controllers
directory. In fact, you should have an example controller there already: hello_controller.js
:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
import { Controller } from '@hotwired/stimulus';
export default class extends Controller {
connect() {
this.element.textContent = 'Hello Stimulus! Edit me in assets/controllers/hello_controller.js';
}
}
Then, activate the controller in your HTML:
1 2 3
<div data-controller="hello">
...
</div>
Optionally, this bundle has a Twig function to render the attribute:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
<div {{ stimulus_controller('hello') }}>
...
</div>
<!-- would render -->
<div data-controller="hello">
...
</div>
That's it! Whenever this element appears on the page, the hello
controller
will activate.
There's a lot more to learn about Stimulus. See the Stimulus Documentation for all the goodies.
TypeScript Controllers
If you want to use TypeScript to define your controllers, you can! Install and set up the
sensiolabs/typescript-bundle. Then be sure to add the assets/controllers
path to the
sensiolabs_typescript.source_dir
configuration. Finally, create your controller in that
directory and you're good to go.
The UX Packages
Symfony provides a set of UX packages that add extra Stimulus controllers to solve
common problems. StimulusBundle activates any 3rd party Stimulus controllers
that are mentioned in your assets/controllers.json
file. This file is updated
whenever you install a UX package.
The official UX packages are:
- ux-autocomplete: Transform
EntityType
,ChoiceType
or any<select>
element into an Ajax-powered autocomplete field (see demo) - ux-chartjs: Easy charts with Chart.js (see demo)
- ux-cropperjs: Form Type and tools for cropping images (see demo)
- ux-dropzone: Form Type for stylized "drop zone" for file uploads (see demo)
- ux-lazy-image: Optimize Image Loading with BlurHash (see demo)
- ux-live-component: Build Dynamic Interfaces with Zero JavaScript (see demo)
- ux-notify: Send server-sent native notification with Mercure (see demo)
- ux-react: Render React component from Twig (see demo)
- ux-svelte: Render Svelte component from Twig (see demo)
- ux-swup: Integration with Swup (see demo)
- ux-toggle-password: Toggle visibility of password inputs (see demo)
- ux-translator: Use your Symfony translations in JavaScript Swup (see demo)
- ux-turbo: Integration with Turbo Drive for a single-page-app experience (see demo)
- ux-twig-component: Build Twig Components Backed by a PHP Class (see demo)
- ux-typed: Integration with Typed (see demo)
- ux-vue: Render Vue component from Twig (see demo)
Lazy Stimulus Controllers
By default, all of your controllers (i.e. files in assets/controllers/
+
controllers in assets/controllers.json
) will be downloaded and loaded on
every page.
Sometimes you may have a controller that's only used on some pages. In that case,
you can make the controller "lazy". In this case, will not be downloaded on
initial page load. Instead, as soon as an element appears on the page matching
the controller (e.g. <div data-controller="hello">
), the controller - and anything
else it imports - will be lazily-loaded via Ajax.
To make one of your custom controllers lazy, add a special comment on top:
1 2 3 4 5 6
import { Controller } from '@hotwired/stimulus';
/* stimulusFetch: 'lazy' */
export default class extends Controller {
// ...
}
To make a third-party controller lazy, in assets/controllers.json
, set
fetch
to lazy
.
Note
If you write your controllers using TypeScript, make sure
removeComments
is not set to true
in your TypeScript config.
Stimulus Tools around the World
Because Stimulus is used by developers outside of Symfony, many tools exist beyond the UX packages:
- stimulus-use: Add composable behaviors to your Stimulus controllers, like debouncing, detecting outside clicks and many other things.
- stimulus-components A large number of pre-made Stimulus controllers, like for Copying to clipboard, Sortable, Popover (similar to tooltips) and much more.
Stimulus Twig Helpers
This bundle adds some Twig functions/filters to help add Stimulus controllers, actions and targets in your templates.
Note
Though this bundle provides these helpful Twig functions/filters, it's recommended to use raw data attributes instead, as they're straightforward.
Tip
If you use PhpStorm IDE - you may want to install Stimulus plugin to get nice auto-completion for the attributes.
stimulus_controller
This bundle ships with a special stimulus_controller()
Twig function
that can be used to render Stimulus Controllers & Values and CSS Classes.
Stimulus Controllers can also reference other controllers by using Outlets.
For example:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
<div {{ stimulus_controller('chart', { 'name': 'Likes', 'data': [1, 2, 3, 4] }) }}>
Hello
</div>
<!-- would render -->
<div
data-controller="chart"
data-chart-name-value="Likes"
data-chart-data-value="[1,2,3,4]"
>
Hello
</div>
If you want to set CSS classes:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18
<div {{ stimulus_controller('chart', { 'name': 'Likes', 'data': [1, 2, 3, 4] }, { 'loading': 'spinner' }) }}>
Hello
</div>
<!-- would render -->
<div
data-controller="chart"
data-chart-name-value="Likes"
data-chart-data-value="[1,2,3,4]"
data-chart-loading-class="spinner"
>
Hello
</div>
<!-- or without values -->
<div {{ stimulus_controller('chart', controllerClasses = { 'loading': 'spinner' }) }}>
Hello
</div>
And with outlets:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19
<div {{ stimulus_controller('chart', { 'name': 'Likes', 'data': [1, 2, 3, 4] }, { 'loading': 'spinner' }, { 'other': '.target' ) }}>
Hello
</div>
<!-- would render -->
<div
data-controller="chart"
data-chart-name-value="Likes"
data-chart-data-value="[1,2,3,4]"
data-chart-loading-class="spinner"
data-chart-other-outlet=".target"
>
Hello
</div>
<!-- or without values/classes -->
<div {{ stimulus_controller('chart', controllerOutlets = { 'other': '.target' }) }}>
Hello
</div>
Any non-scalar values (like data: [1, 2, 3, 4]
) are JSON-encoded. And all
values are properly escaped (the string [
is an escaped
[
character, so the attribute is really [1,2,3,4]
).
If you have multiple controllers on the same element, you can chain them as
there's also a stimulus_controller
filter:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
<div {{ stimulus_controller('chart', { 'name': 'Likes' })|stimulus_controller('other-controller') }}>
Hello
</div>
<!-- would render -->
<div data-controller="chart other-controller" data-chart-name-value="Likes">
Hello
</div>
You can also retrieve the generated attributes as an array, which can be helpful e.g. for forms:
1
{{ form_start(form, { attr: stimulus_controller('chart', { 'name': 'Likes' }).toArray() }) }}
stimulus_action
The stimulus_action()
Twig function can be used to render Stimulus Actions.
For example:
1 2 3 4 5 6
<div {{ stimulus_action('controller', 'method') }}>Hello</div>
<div {{ stimulus_action('controller', 'method', 'click') }}>Hello</div>
<!-- would render -->
<div data-action="controller#method">Hello</div>
<div data-action="click->controller#method">Hello</div>
If you have multiple actions and/or methods on the same element, you can chain
them as there's also a stimulus_action
filter:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
<div {{ stimulus_action('controller', 'method')|stimulus_action('other-controller', 'test') }}>
Hello
</div>
<!-- would render -->
<div data-action="controller#method other-controller#test">
Hello
</div>
You can also retrieve the generated attributes as an array, which can be helpful e.g. for forms:
1
{{ form_row(form.password, { attr: stimulus_action('hello-controller', 'checkPasswordStrength').toArray() }) }}
You can also pass parameters to actions:
1 2 3 4
<div {{ stimulus_action('hello-controller', 'method', 'click', { 'count': 3 }) }}>Hello</div>
<!-- would render -->
<div data-action="click->hello-controller#method" data-hello-controller-count-param="3">Hello</div>
stimulus_target
The stimulus_target()
Twig function can be used to render Stimulus Targets.
For example:
1 2 3 4 5 6
<div {{ stimulus_target('controller', 'myTarget') }}>Hello</div>
<div {{ stimulus_target('controller', 'myTarget secondTarget') }}>Hello</div>
<!-- would render -->
<div data-controller-target="myTarget">Hello</div>
<div data-controller-target="myTarget secondTarget">Hello</div>
If you have multiple targets on the same element, you can chain them as there's
also a stimulus_target
filter:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
<div {{ stimulus_target('controller', 'myTarget')|stimulus_target('other-controller', 'anotherTarget') }}>
Hello
</div>
<!-- would render -->
<div data-controller-target="myTarget" data-other-controller-target="anotherTarget">
Hello
</div>
You can also retrieve the generated attributes as an array, which can be helpful e.g. for forms:
1
{{ form_row(form.password, { attr: stimulus_target('hello-controller', 'myTarget').toArray() }) }}
Configuration
If you're using AssetMapper, you can configure the path to your controllers
directory and the controllers.json
file if you need to use different paths:
1 2 3 4 5 6
# config/packages/stimulus.yaml
stimulus:
# the default values
controller_paths:
- '%kernel.project_dir%/assets/controllers'
controllers_json: '%kernel.project_dir%/assets/controllers.json'
Manual Installation Details
When you install this bundle, its Flex recipe should handle updating all the files needed. If you're not using Flex or want to double-check the changes, check out the StimulusBundle Flex recipe. Here's a summary of what's inside:
assets/bootstrap.js
starts the Stimulus application and loads your controllers. It's imported byassets/app.js
and its exact content depends on whether you have Webpack Encore or AssetMapper installed (see below).assets/app.js
is updated to importassets/bootstrap.js
assets/controllers.json
This file starts (mostly) empty and is automatically updated as your install UX packages that provide Stimulus controllers.assets/controllers/
This directory is where you should put your custom Stimulus controllers. It comes with one examplehello_controller.js
file.
A few other changes depend on which asset system you're using:
With AssetMapper
If you're using AssetMapper, two new entries will be added to your importmap.php
file:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
// importmap.php
return [
// ...
'@symfony/stimulus-bundle' => [
'path' => '@symfony/stimulus-bundle/loader.js',
],
'@hotwired/stimulus' => [
'version' => '3.2.2',
],
];
The recipe will update your assets/bootstrap.js
file to look like this:
1 2 3 4
// assets/bootstrap.js
import { startStimulusApp } from '@symfony/stimulus-bundle';
const app = startStimulusApp();
The @symfony/stimulus-bundle
refers the one of the new entries in your
importmap.php
file. This file is dynamically built by the bundle and
will import all your custom controllers as well as those from controllers.json
.
It will also dynamically enable "debug" mode in Stimulus when your application
is running in debug mode.
Tip
For AssetMapper 6.3 only, you also need a {{ ux_controller_link_tags() }
in base.html.twig
. This is not needed in AssetMapper 6.4+.
With WebpackEncoreBundle
If you're using Webpack Encore, the recipe will also update your webpack.config.js
file to include this line:
1 2
// webpack.config.js
.enableStimulusBridge('./assets/controllers.json')
The assets/bootstrap.js
file will be updated to look like this:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
// assets/bootstrap.js
import { startStimulusApp } from '@symfony/stimulus-bridge';
// Registers Stimulus controllers from controllers.json and in the controllers/ directory
export const app = startStimulusApp(require.context(
'@symfony/stimulus-bridge/lazy-controller-loader!./controllers',
true,
/\.[jt]sx?$/
));
And 2 new packages - @hotwired/stimulus
and @symfony/stimulus-bridge
- will
be added to your package.json
file.
How are the Stimulus Controllers Loaded?
When you install a UX PHP package, Symfony Flex will automatically update your
package.json
file (not done or needed if using AssetMapper) to point to a
"virtual package" that lives inside that PHP package. For example:
1 2 3 4 5 6
{
"devDependencies": {
"...": "",
"@symfony/ux-chartjs": "file:vendor/symfony/ux-chartjs/assets"
}
}
This gives you a real Node package (e.g. @symfony/ux-chartjs
) that, instead
of being downloaded, points directly to files that already live in your vendor/
directory.
The Flex recipe will usually also update your assets/controllers.json
file
to add a new Stimulus controller to your app. For example:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
{
"controllers": {
"@symfony/ux-chartjs": {
"chart": {
"enabled": true,
"fetch": "eager"
}
}
},
"entrypoints": []
}
Finally, your assets/bootstrap.js
file will automatically register:
- All files in
assets/controllers/
as Stimulus controllers; - And all controllers described in
assets/controllers.json
as Stimulus controllers.
Note
If you're using WebpackEncore, the bootstrap.js
file works in partnership
with @symfony/stimulus-bridge. With AssetMapper, the bootstrap.js
file
works directly with this bundle: a @symfony/stimulus-bundle
entry is added
to your importmap.php
file via Flex, which points to a file that is dynamically
built to find and load your controllers (see Configuration).
The end result: you install a package, and you instantly have a Stimulus
controller available! In this example, it's called
@symfony/ux-chartjs/chart
. Well, technically, it will be called
symfony--ux-chartjs--chart
. However, you can pass the original name
into the {{ stimulus_controller() }}
function from WebpackEncoreBundle, and
it will normalize it:
1 2 3 4
<div {{ stimulus_controller('@symfony/ux-chartjs/chart') }}>
<!-- will render as: -->
<div data-controller="symfony--ux-chartjs--chart">