Laravel Eloquent: Accessing properties and Dynamic Table Names

I assume you know how to navigate the Laravel API / codebase since you will need it to fully understand this answer...

Disclaimer: Even though I tested some cases I can't guarantee It always works. If you run into a problem, let me know and I'll try my best to help you.

I see you have multiple cases where you need this kind of dynamic table name, so we will start off by creating a BaseModel so we don't have to repeat ourselves.

class BaseModel extends Eloquent {}

class Team extends BaseModel {}

Nothing exciting so far. Next, we take a look at one of the static functions in Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model and write our own static function, let's call it year. (Put this in the BaseModel)

public static function year($year){
    $instance = new static;
    return $instance->newQuery();
}

This function now does nothing but create a new instance of the current model and then initialize the query builder on it. In a similar fashion to the way Laravel does it in the Model class.

The next step will be to create a function that actually sets the table on an instantiated model. Let's call this one setYear. And we'll also add an instance variable to store the year separately from the actual table name.

protected $year = null;

public function setYear($year){
    $this->year = $year;
    if($year != null){
        $this->table = 'gamedata_'.$year.'_'.$this->getTable(); // you could use the logic from your example as well, but getTable looks nicer
    }
}

Now we have to change the year to actually call setYear

public static function year($year){
    $instance = new static;
    $instance->setYear($year);
    return $instance->newQuery();
}

And last but not least, we have to override newInstance(). This method is used my Laravel when using find() for example.

public function newInstance($attributes = array(), $exists = false)
{
    $model = parent::newInstance($attributes, $exists);
    $model->setYear($this->year);
    return $model;
}

That's the basics. Here's how to use it:

$team = Team::year(2015)->find(1);

$newTeam = new Team();
$newTeam->setTable(2015);
$newTeam->property = 'value';
$newTeam->save();

The next step are relationships. And that's were it gets real tricky.

The methods for relations (like: hasMany('Player')) don't support passing in objects. They take a class and then create an instance from it. The simplest solution I could found, is by creating the relationship object manually. (in Team)

public function players(){
    $instance = new Player();
    $instance->setYear($this->year);

    $foreignKey = $instance->getTable.'.'.$this->getForeignKey();
    $localKey = $this->getKeyName();

    return new HasMany($instance->newQuery(), $this, $foreignKey, $localKey);
}

Note: the foreign key will still be called team_id (without the year) I suppose that is what you want.

Unfortunately, you will have to do this for every relationship you define. For other relationship types look at the code in Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model. You can basically copy paste it and make a few changes. If you use a lot of relationships on your year-dependent models you could also override the relationship methods in your BaseModel.

View the full BaseModel on Pastebin