Laravel hasMany and belongsTo parameters

To simplify the syntax, think of the return $this->hasMany('App\Comment', 'foreign_key', 'local_key'); parameters as:

  1. The model you want to link to
  2. The column of the foreign table (the table you are linking to) that links back to the id column of the current table (unless you are specifying the third parameter, in which case it will use that)
  3. The column of the current table that should be used - i.e if you don't want the foreign key of the other table to link to the id column of the current table

In your circumstance, because you have used store_id in the libraries table, you've made life easy for yourself. The below should work perfectly when defined in your Store model:

public function libraries()
{
    return $this->hasMany('App\Library');
}

Behind the scenes, Laravel will automatically link the id column of the Store table to the store_id column of the Library table.

If you wanted to explicitly define it, then you would do it like this:

public function libraries(){
    return $this->hasMany('App\Library', 'store_id','id');
}
  • A model standard is that singularly-named functions return a belongsTo, while a plural function returns a hasMany (ie. $store->libraries() or $library->store()).

Store table:

store_id (PK)

Library table:

library_id (PK) 
library_fk_store_id (FK)

Store model:

public function libraries()
{
    return $this->hasMany(Library::class, 'library_fk_store_id','library_id');
}

Library model:

public function store()
{
        return $this->belongsTo(Store::class, 'library_fk_store_id', 'store_id');
}
  • Foreign keys are identical in both methods:
`library_fk_store_id`
  • Local/Owner keys are the ids from the opposite model/table:
`Store model -> library_id`
`Library model -> store_id`
  • Local/Owner keys has the same name from the method names:
`libraries() -> library_id`
`store() -> store_id`

Try this one. It works. Add this to your model.

Library model

public function store()
    {
        return $this->belongsTo(Store::class, 'store_id', 'id');
    }

Store model

 public function libraries()
    {
        return $this->hasMany(Library::class);
    }

example code.

 $store = Store::find(1);
 dd($store->libraries);

Because in this case a store has many libraries, the Store model has a libraries() function. Refer to last line of James' answer for more information on this standard.