Welcome to the first lesson of our course on building an image generation web application with PHP! In this course, you'll learn how to create a user-friendly web interface for an AI-powered image generation service using PHP as the backend. By the end of this course, you'll have built a complete web application that allows users to generate images based on text prompts and view their generation history.
In this first lesson, we'll focus on creating the HTML structure for our application. This structure will serve as the foundation for our user interface, providing the elements with which users will interact to generate images and view their history.
Our application will have two main sections:
- A "Generate Image" tab where users can enter prompts and customize their image generation.
- A "View History" tab where users can see their previously generated images.
Before we dive into the code, let's understand how PHP serves HTML templates. In a PHP application, HTML files are often written as .php
files, allowing you to embed PHP code directly within your HTML.
Now, let's start building our HTML interface!
Before we start building the HTML for our image generation interface, let's take a moment to understand how our PHP application is organized. A clear file structure helps us stay organized as our project grows in complexity.
Here's a typical structure we'll be working with:
With this structure in mind, you'll find it easier to understand where each part of the code lives as we build out the HTML and connect it to our PHP backend.
Every HTML document starts with a basic structure that includes the document type declaration, the HTML root element, and the head and body sections. In PHP Laravel app, you can create this structure in a .blade.php
file, which allows you to add HTML code.
Here's how you can set up the basic HTML structure for your image generator application in a PHP file:
Let's break down what each part of this code does:
<!DOCTYPE html>
tells the browser that this is an HTML5 document.<html lang="en">
is the root element of the HTML document, with "en" specifying English as the language.- The
<head>
section contains metadata about the document:<meta charset="UTF-8">
specifies the character encoding for the document.<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0">
ensures proper scaling on mobile devices.<title>AI Event Banner Generator</title>
sets the title that appears in the browser tab.<link rel="stylesheet" href="/css/style.css">
links to our CSS file, which is located in theresources/css/
directory.
Our application will have two main tabs: one for generating images and another for viewing the history of generated images. Let's create the tab navigation system that will allow users to switch between these views.
In this code, we've added:
- A
<div>
with the classtabs
that contains two buttons, one for each tab. - Each button has an
onclick
attribute that calls a JavaScript function namedopenTab
with the ID of the tab to open. - Two
<div>
elements with the classtab-content
and IDsgenerate
andhistory
. These will contain the content for each tab. - The "history" tab content has
style="display:none;"
to hide it initially, showing only the "generate" tab when the page loads.
The openTab
function will be defined in our JavaScript file, which we'll link at the end of our HTML document. This function will handle showing and hiding the appropriate tab content when a user clicks a tab button.
Now, let's fill in the content for each tab.
The "Generate Image" tab will contain a form where users can enter a prompt for the image they want to generate and select an aspect ratio. Let's create this form:
Let's examine the elements in our form:
- A container
<div>
to hold all the form elements. - An
<h1>
heading that displays the title of our application. - An
<input>
field where users can enter their image description (prompt). - A dropdown
<select>
menu for choosing the aspect ratio of the generated image, with options for square, widescreen, classic, and portrait formats. - A button that, when clicked, will call a JavaScript function named
generateImage()
to process the form and generate the image. - A loading message that will be displayed while the image is being generated. It's initially hidden with
style="display: none;"
. - An empty
<div>
with the IDimage-container
where the generated image will be displayed.
The "View History" tab will allow users to see their previously generated images. Let's create the content for this tab:
The history view is simpler than the generation form:
- A container
<div>
to hold all the elements. - An
<h1>
heading that displays "Image History". - A button that, when clicked, will call a JavaScript function named
fetchHistory()
to load the user's previously generated images. - An empty
<div>
with the IDhistory-container
where the images will be displayed.
The fetchHistory()
function will be defined in our JavaScript file. It will fetch the user's image history from our backend API and display the images in the history-container
div.
Now that we have created all the necessary HTML elements, let's connect everything together by adding the script tag at the end of our body section:
Here, we use a standard HTML path to link our JavaScript file, which is located in the resources/js/
directory.
Here's the complete HTML code for our image generator application:
In this lesson, we've created the HTML structure for our image generator application using PHP. We've set up a tab navigation system, designed a form for generating images, and created a view for displaying the image history. We've also linked our CSS and JavaScript files using standard HTML paths suitable for a PHP project.
Right now, our application doesn't look very appealing because we haven't added any styling yet. Additionally, the buttons don't do anything because we haven't implemented the JavaScript functions. In the next lesson, we'll add CSS to style our application and make it visually appealing. After that, we'll implement the JavaScript functions to handle user interactions and communicate with our PHP backend.
The HTML structure we've created serves as the foundation for our application. It defines the elements with which users will interact and provides the structure that our CSS and JavaScript will build upon. By understanding this structure, you'll be better prepared to implement the styling and functionality in the upcoming lessons.
In the practice exercises that follow, you'll have the opportunity to modify this HTML structure and experiment with different elements to better understand how they work together. You'll also get to see how the HTML structure interacts with CSS and JavaScript to create a complete web application.
