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Create your First Page in Symfony

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Read the updated version of this page for Symfony 7.2 (the current stable version).

Create your First Page in Symfony

Creating a new page - whether it's an HTML page or a JSON endpoint - is a two-step process:

  1. Create a route: A route is the URL (e.g. /about) to your page and points to a controller;
  2. Create a controller: A controller is the PHP function you write that builds the page. You take the incoming request information and use it to create a Symfony Response object, which can hold HTML content, a JSON string or even a binary file like an image or PDF.

Screencast

Do you prefer video tutorials? Check out the Harmonious Development with Symfony screencast series.

See also

Symfony embraces the HTTP Request-Response lifecycle. To find out more, see Symfony and HTTP Fundamentals.

Creating a Page: Route and Controller

Tip

Before continuing, make sure you've read the Setup article and can access your new Symfony app in the browser.

Suppose you want to create a page - /lucky/number - that generates a lucky (well, random) number and prints it. To do that, create a "Controller" class and a "controller" method inside of it:

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<?php
// src/Controller/LuckyController.php
namespace App\Controller;

use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response;

class LuckyController
{
    public function number(): Response
    {
        $number = random_int(0, 100);

        return new Response(
            '<html><body>Lucky number: '.$number.'</body></html>'
        );
    }
}

Now you need to associate this controller function with a public URL (e.g. /lucky/number) so that the number() method is called when a user browses to it. This association is defined by creating a route in the config/routes.yaml file:

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# config/routes.yaml

# the "app_lucky_number" route name is not important yet
app_lucky_number:
    path: /lucky/number
    controller: App\Controller\LuckyController::number

That's it! If you are using Symfony web server, try it out by going to: http://localhost:8000/lucky/number

If you see a lucky number being printed back to you, congratulations! But before you run off to play the lottery, check out how this works. Remember the two steps to create a page?

  1. Create a controller and a method: This is a function where you build the page and ultimately return a Response object. You'll learn more about controllers in their own section, including how to return JSON responses;
  2. Create a route: In config/routes.yaml, the route defines the URL to your page (path) and what controller to call. You'll learn more about routing in its own section, including how to make variable URLs.

Annotation Routes

Instead of defining your route in YAML, Symfony also allows you to use annotation or attribute routes. Attributes are built-in in PHP starting from PHP 8. In earlier PHP versions you can use annotations. To do this, install the annotations package:

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$ composer require annotations

You can now add your route directly above the controller:

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// src/Controller/LuckyController.php

// ...
+ use Symfony\Component\Routing\Annotation\Route;

class LuckyController
{
+   #[Route('/lucky/number')]
    public function number(): Response
    {
        // this looks exactly the same
    }
}

That's it! The page - http://localhost:8000/lucky/number will work exactly like before! Annotations/attributes are the recommended way to configure routes.

Auto-Installing Recipes with Symfony Flex

You may not have noticed, but when you ran composer require annotations, two special things happened, both thanks to a powerful Composer plugin called Flex.

First, annotations isn't a real package name: it's an alias (i.e. shortcut) that Flex resolves to sensio/framework-extra-bundle.

Second, after this package was downloaded, Flex runs a recipe, which is a set of automated instructions that tell Symfony how to integrate an external package. Flex recipes exist for many packages and have the ability to do a lot, like adding configuration files, creating directories, updating .gitignore and adding a new config to your .env file. Flex automates the installation of packages so you can get back to coding.

The bin/console Command

Your project already has a powerful debugging tool inside: the bin/console command. Try running it:

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$ php bin/console

You should see a list of commands that can give you debugging information, help generate code, generate database migrations and a lot more. As you install more packages, you'll see more commands.

To get a list of all of the routes in your system, use the debug:router command:

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$ php bin/console debug:router

You should see your app_lucky_number route in the list:

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----------------  -------  -------  -----  --------------
Name              Method   Scheme   Host   Path
----------------  -------  -------  -----  --------------
app_lucky_number  ANY      ANY      ANY    /lucky/number
----------------  -------  -------  -----  --------------

You will also see debugging routes besides app_lucky_number -- more on the debugging routes in the next section.

You'll learn about many more commands as you continue!

Tip

If you are using the Bash shell, you can set up completion support. This autocompletes commands and other input when using bin/console. See the Console document for more information on how to set up completion.

The Web Debug Toolbar: Debugging Dream

One of Symfony's amazing features is the Web Debug Toolbar: a bar that displays a huge amount of debugging information along the bottom of your page while developing. This is all included out of the box using a Symfony pack called symfony/profiler-pack.

You will see a dark bar along the bottom of the page. You'll learn more about all the information it holds along the way, but feel free to experiment: hover over and click the different icons to get information about routing, performance, logging and more.

Rendering a Template

If you're returning HTML from your controller, you'll probably want to render a template. Fortunately, Symfony comes with Twig: a templating language that's minimal, powerful and actually quite fun.

Install the twig package with:

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$ composer require twig

Make sure that LuckyController extends Symfony's base AbstractController class:

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// src/Controller/LuckyController.php

  // ...
+ use Symfony\Bundle\FrameworkBundle\Controller\AbstractController;

- class LuckyController
+ class LuckyController extends AbstractController
  {
      // ...
  }

Now, use the handy render() method to render a template. Pass it a number variable so you can use it in Twig:

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// src/Controller/LuckyController.php
namespace App\Controller;

use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response;
// ...

class LuckyController extends AbstractController
{
    #[Route('/lucky/number')]
    public function number(): Response
    {
        $number = random_int(0, 100);

        return $this->render('lucky/number.html.twig', [
            'number' => $number,
        ]);
    }
}

Template files live in the templates/ directory, which was created for you automatically when you installed Twig. Create a new templates/lucky directory with a new number.html.twig file inside:

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{# templates/lucky/number.html.twig #}
<h1>Your lucky number is {{ number }}</h1>

The {{ number }} syntax is used to print variables in Twig. Refresh your browser to get your new lucky number!

http://localhost:8000/lucky/number

Now you may wonder where the Web Debug Toolbar has gone: that's because there is no </body> tag in the current template. You can add the body element yourself, or extend base.html.twig, which contains all default HTML elements.

In the templates article, you'll learn all about Twig: how to loop, render other templates and leverage its powerful layout inheritance system.

Checking out the Project Structure

Great news! You've already worked inside the most important directories in your project:

config/
Contains... configuration!. You will configure routes, services and packages.
src/
All your PHP code lives here.
templates/
All your Twig templates live here.

Most of the time, you'll be working in src/, templates/ or config/. As you keep reading, you'll learn what can be done inside each of these.

So what about the other directories in the project?

bin/
The famous bin/console file lives here (and other, less important executable files).
var/
This is where automatically-created files are stored, like cache files (var/cache/) and logs (var/log/).
vendor/
Third-party (i.e. "vendor") libraries live here! These are downloaded via the Composer package manager.
public/
This is the document root for your project: you put any publicly accessible files here.

And when you install new packages, new directories will be created automatically when needed.

What's Next?

Congrats! You're already starting to master Symfony and learn a whole new way of building beautiful, functional, fast and maintainable applications.

OK, time to finish mastering the fundamentals by reading these articles:

Then, learn about other important topics like the service container, the form system, using Doctrine (if you need to query a database) and more!

Have fun!

This work, including the code samples, is licensed under a Creative Commons BY-SA 3.0 license.
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