spatie/schema-org
provides a fluent builder for all Schema.org types and their properties. The code in src
is generated from Schema.org's JSON-LD standards file, so it provides objects and methods for the entire core vocabulary. The classes and methods are also fully documented as a quick reference.
use Spatie\SchemaOrg\Schema;
$localBusiness = Schema::localBusiness()
->name('Spatie')
->email('[email protected]')
->contactPoint(Schema::contactPoint()->areaServed('Worldwide'));
echo $localBusiness->toScript();
<script type="application/ld+json">
{
"@context": "https:\/\/schema.org",
"@type": "LocalBusiness",
"name": "Spatie",
"email": "[email protected]",
"contactPoint": {
"@type": "ContactPoint",
"areaServed": "Worldwide"
}
}
</script>
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You can install the package via composer:
composer require spatie/schema-org
All types can be instantiated through the Spatie\SchemaOrg\Schema
factory class, or with the new
keyword.
$localBusiness = Schema::localBusiness()->name('Spatie');
// Is equivalent to:
$localBusiness = new LocalBusiness();
$localBusiness->name('Spatie');
All types also accept arrays of the expected data type, for example
sameAs
accepts a string or an array of strings.
All types also implement the SPL's ArrayAccess
for accessing the properties via array notation:
$anotherLocalBusiness = new LocalBusiness();
var_dump(isset($anotherLocalBusiness['name'])); // => false
$anotherLocalBusiness['name'] = 'Spatie';
var_dump(isset($anotherLocalBusiness['name'])); // => true
var_dump($anotherLocalBusiness['name']); // => 'Spatie'
unset($anotherLocalBusiness['name']);
var_dump(isset($anotherLocalBusiness['name'])); // => false
Types can be converted to an array or rendered to a script.
$localBusiness->toArray();
echo $localBusiness->toScript();
echo $localBusiness; // Same output as `toScript()`
Additionally, all types can be converted to a plain JSON string by just calling json_encode()
with your object:
echo json_encode($localBusiness);
I recommend double checking your structured data with Google's structured data testing tool.
As of v1.6.0, all Enumeration child types are available as classes with constants.
Schema::book()->bookFormat(Spatie\SchemaOrg\BookFormatType::Hardcover);
There's no full API documentation for types and properties. You can refer to the source or to the schema.org website.
If you don't want to break the chain of a large schema object, you can use the if
method to conditionally modify the schema.
use Spatie\SchemaOrg\LocalBusiness;
use Spatie\SchemaOrg\Schema;
$business = ['name' => 'Spatie'];
$localBusiness = Schema::localBusiness()
->name($business['name'])
->if(isset($business['email']), function (LocalBusiness $schema) use ($business) {
$schema->email($business['email']);
});
As of v2.6.0 the identifier
key is replaced by @id
for simple string identifiers. This is due to the definition for the ld+json
syntax.
All schema.org syntaxes already have built-in representation for URIs and URLs, e.g. in Microdata 'itemid', in RDFa 1.1, 'resource', in JSON-LD, '@id'.
— schema.org/docs // PR#102 // PR#157
If you'd need to set a custom property, you can use the setProperty
method.
$localBusiness->setProperty('foo', 'bar');
If you'd need to retrieve a property, you can use the getProperty
method. You can optionally pass in a second parameter to provide a default value.
$localBusiness->getProperty('name'); // 'Spatie'
$localBusiness->getProperty('bar'); // null
$localBusiness->getProperty('bar', 'baz'); // 'baz'
All properties can be retrieved as an array with the getProperties
method.
$localBusiness->getProperties(); // ['name' => 'Spatie', ...]
Multiple properties can be set at once using the addProperties
method.
$localBusiness->addProperties(['name' => 'value', 'foo' => 'bar']);
Context and type can be retrieved with the getContext
and getType
methods.
$localBusiness->getContext(); // 'https://schema.org'
$localBusiness->getType(); // 'LocalBusiness'
The Graph has a lot of methods and utilities - the type-safe and simplest way is to use the overloaded methods of the Spatie\SchemaOrg\Schema
class itself. These methods will get an already created or new instance of the requested schema.
$graph = new Graph();
// Create a product and prelink organization
$graph
->product()
->name('My cool Product')
->brand($graph->organization());
// Hide the organization from the created script tag
$graph->hide(\Spatie\SchemaOrg\Organization::class);
// Somewhere else fill out the organization
$graph
->organization()
->name('My awesome Company');
// Render graph to script tag
echo $graph;
With these tools the graph is a collection of all available schemas, can link these schemas with each other and prevent helper schemas from being rendered in the script-tag.
Sometimes you have to keep track of multiple Graph nodes of the same type - for example multiple Person
nodes for different people in your Organization.
To do so you are able to use node identifiers on your graph instance.
If you don't provide an identifier a reserved keyword default
identifier will be used.
use Spatie\SchemaOrg\Graph;
use Spatie\SchemaOrg\Person;
$graph = new Graph();
// add a Person using chaining
$graph->person('freekmurze')
->givenName('Freek')
->familyName('Van der Herten')
->alternateName('freekmurze');
// add a Person using closure
$graph->person('sebastiandedeyne', function(Person $sebastian, Graph $graph): void {
$sebastian
->givenName('Sebastian')
->familyName('De Deyne')
->alternateName('sebastiandedeyne');
});
// add a person using closure and second call with same identifier
$graph->person(
'gummibeer',
fn(Person $gummibeer) => $gummibeer->alternateName('gummibeer')
);
$graph->person('gummibeer')
->givenName('Tom')
->familyName('Witkowski');
$graph->person('random')->name('Random Person');
// hide the random person from Graph
$graph->hide(Person::class, 'random');
echo json_encode($graph);
{
"@context":"https:\/\/schema.org",
"@graph":[
{
"@type":"Person",
"givenName":"Freek",
"familyName":"Van der Herten",
"alternateName":"freekmurze"
},
{
"@type":"Person",
"givenName":"Sebastian",
"familyName":"De Deyne",
"alternateName":"sebastiandedeyne"
},
{
"@type":"Person",
"alternateName":"gummibeer",
"givenName":"Tom",
"familyName":"Witkowski"
}
]
}
Schema.org allows multi typed entities - to use them with this package you can use the MultiTypedEntity
class - which works similar to the graph.
$mte = new MultiTypedEntity();
$mte->hotelRoom()->name('The Presidential Suite');
$mte->product()->offers(
Schema::offer()
->name('One Night')
->price(100000.00)
->priceCurrency('USD')
);
$mte->product(function (Product $product) {
$product->aggregateRating(
Schema::aggregateRating()
->bestRating(5)
->worstRating(4)
);
});
echo json_encode($mte);
{
"@context":"https:\/\/schema.org",
"@type":[
"HotelRoom",
"Product"
],
"name":"The Presidential Suite",
"offers":{
"@type":"Offer",
"name":"One Night",
"price":100000,
"priceCurrency":"USD"
},
"aggregateRating":{
"@type":"AggregateRating",
"bestRating":5,
"worstRating":4
}
}
There isn't a real rule in place how the properties are merged. It only uses array_merge()
behind the scenes. So you should avoid defining the same property on different types in the MTE or be sure that all properties hold the same value that it's not important which property is used at the end.
- The
Float
type isn't available since it's a reserved keyword in PHP - The
Physician
type isn't available since it extends a type from thehealth
extension spec
Please see CHANGELOG for more information what has changed recently.
$ composer test
Please see CONTRIBUTING for details.
If you've found a bug regarding security please mail [email protected] instead of using the issue tracker.
You're free to use this package, but if it makes it to your production environment we highly appreciate you sending us a postcard from your hometown, mentioning which of our package(s) you are using.
Our address is: Spatie, Kruikstraat 22, 2018 Antwerp, Belgium.
We publish all received postcards on our company website.
The MIT License (MIT). Please see License File for more information.