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Models

Models are the classes that sit as the business layer in your application. This means that they should be responsible for managing almost everything that happens regarding your data, its validity, interactions and evolution of the information workflow in your domain of work.

Usually model classes represent data and are used in CakePHP applications for data access, more specifically they represent a database table but they are not limited to this, but can be used to access anything that manipulates data such as files, external web services, iCal events, or rows in a CSV file.

A model can be associated with other models. For example, a Recipe may be associated with the Author of the recipe as well as the Ingredient in the recipe.

This section will explain what features of the model can be automated, how to override those features, and what methods and properties a model can have. It'll explain the different ways to associate your data. It'll describe how to find, save, and delete data. Finally, it'll look at Datasources.

Understanding Models

A Model represents your data model. In object-oriented programming a data model is an object that represents a "thing", like a car, a person, or a house. A blog, for example, may have many blog posts and each blog post may have many comments. The Blog, Post, and Comment are all examples of models, each associated with another.

Here is a simple example of a model definition in CakePHP:

class Ingredient extends AppModel {
    public $name = 'Ingredient';
}

With just this simple declaration, the Ingredient model is bestowed with all the functionality you need to create queries along with saving and deleting data. These magic methods come from CakePHP's Model class by the magic of inheritance. The Ingredient model extends the application model, AppModel, which extends CakePHP's internal Model class. It is this core Model class that bestows the functionality onto your Ingredient model.

This intermediate class, AppModel, is empty and if you haven't created your own, is taken from within the CakePHP core folder. Overriding the AppModel allows you to define functionality that should be made available to all models within your application. To do so, you need to create your own AppModel.php file that resides in the Model folder, as all other models in your application. Creating a project using Bake <console-and-shells/code-generation-with-bake> will automatically generate this file for you.

See also Behaviors <models/behaviors> for more information on how to apply similar logic to multiple models.

Back to our Ingredient model, in order to work on it, create the PHP file in the /app/Model/ directory. By convention it should have the same name as the class; for this example Ingredient.php.

Note

CakePHP will dynamically create a model object for you if it cannot find a corresponding file in /app/Model. This also means that if your model file isn't named correctly (i.e. ingredient.php or Ingredients.php) CakePHP will use an instance of AppModel rather than your missing (from CakePHP's perspective) model file. If you're trying to use a method you've defined in your model, or a behavior attached to your model and you're getting SQL errors that are the name of the method you're calling - it's a sure sign CakePHP can't find your model and you either need to check the file names, your application cache, or both.

Note

Some class names are not usable for model names. For instance "File" cannot be used as "File" is a class already existing in the CakePHP core.

With your model defined, it can be accessed from within your Controller <controllers>. CakePHP will automatically make the model available for access when its name matches that of the controller. For example, a controller named IngredientsController will automatically initialize the Ingredient model and attach it to the controller at $this->Ingredient:

class IngredientsController extends AppController {
    public function index() {
        //grab all ingredients and pass it to the view:
        $ingredients = $this->Ingredient->find('all');
        $this->set('ingredients', $ingredients);
    }
}

Associated models are available through the main model. In the following example, Recipe has an association with the Ingredient model:

class Recipe extends AppModel {

    public function steakRecipes() {
        $ingredient = $this->Ingredient->findByName('Steak');
        return $this->findAllByMainIngredient($ingredient['Ingredient']['id']);
    }
}

This shows how to use models that are already linked. To understand how associations are defined take a look at the Associations section <models/associations-linking-models-together>

More on models

models/associations-linking-models-together models/retrieving-your-data models/saving-your-data models/deleting-data models/data-validation models/callback-methods models/behaviors models/datasources models/model-attributes models/additional-methods-and-properties models/virtual-fields models/transactions