Introduction
Livewire components are PHP classes that have their state stored in the user’s browser. When a network request is made, the state is sent to the server, and filled into public properties on the Livewire component class, where it can be accessed in the same way as any other class property in PHP can be. Imagine you had a Livewire component with a public property called$name. You could bind that property to an input field in the HTML of the Livewire component in one of two ways: with the wire:model attribute, or by entangling it with an Alpine.js property:
$name property is updated in the Livewire component class. When the user submits the form, the $name property is sent to the server, where it can be saved.
This is the basis of how fields work in Filament. Each field is assigned to a public property in the Livewire component class, which is where the state of the field is stored. We call the name of this property the “state path” of the field. You can access the state path of a field using the $getStatePath() function in the field’s view:
Custom field classes
You may create your own custom field classes and views, which you can reuse across your project, and even release as a plugin to the community. To create a custom field class and view, you may use the following command:resources/views/filament/forms/components/location-picker.blade.php.
Filament form fields are not Livewire components. Defining public properties and methods on a form field class will not make them accessible in the Blade view.
Accessing the state of another component in the Blade view
Inside the Blade view, you may access the state of another component in the schema using the$get() function:
Accessing the Eloquent record in the Blade view
Inside the Blade view, you may access the current Eloquent record using the$record variable:
Accessing the current operation in the Blade view
Inside the Blade view, you may access the current operation, usuallycreate, edit or view, using the $operation variable:
Accessing the current Livewire component instance in the Blade view
Inside the Blade view, you may access the current Livewire component instance using$this:
Accessing the current field instance in the Blade view
Inside the Blade view, you may access the current field instance using$field. You can call public methods on this object to access other information that may not be available in variables:
Adding a configuration method to a custom field class
You may add a public method to the custom field class that accepts a configuration value, stores it in a protected property, and returns it again from another public method:$getZoom() function:
Allowing utility injection in a custom field configuration method
Utility injection is a powerful feature of Filament that allows users to configure a component using functions that can access various utilities. You can allow utility injection by ensuring that the parameter type and property type of the configuration allows the user to pass aClosure. In the getter method, you should pass the configuration value to the $this->evaluate() method, which will inject utilities into the user’s function if they pass one, or return the value if it is static:
zoom() method, and inject any utility as a parameter:
Obeying state binding modifiers
When you bind a field to a state path, you may use thedefer modifier to ensure that the state is only sent to the server when the user submits the form, or whenever the next Livewire request is made. This is the default behavior.
However, you may use the live() on a field to ensure that the state is sent to the server immediately when the user interacts with the field. This allows for lots of advanced use cases as explained in the reactivity section of the documentation.
Filament provides a $applyStateBindingModifiers() function that you may use in your view to apply any state binding modifiers to a wire:model or $wire.$entangle() binding:
Calling field methods from JavaScript
Sometimes you need to call a method on the field class from JavaScript in the Blade view. For example, you might want to fetch data asynchronously, process a file upload, or perform some server-side computation. Filament provides a way to expose methods on your field class to JavaScript using the#[ExposedLivewireMethod] attribute.
Exposing a method
To expose a method to JavaScript, add the#[ExposedLivewireMethod] attribute to a public method on your custom field class:
Only methods marked with
#[ExposedLivewireMethod] can be called from JavaScript. This is a security measure to prevent arbitrary method execution.Calling the method from JavaScript
In your Blade view, you may call the exposed method using$wire.callSchemaComponentMethod(). The first argument is the component’s key (available via $getKey()), and the second argument is the method name. You may pass arguments as a third argument:
Preventing re-renders
By default, calling an exposed method will trigger a re-render of the Livewire component. If your method doesn’t need to update the UI, you may add Livewire’s#[Renderless] attribute alongside #[ExposedLivewireMethod] to skip the re-render: