Symfony UX
Modern frontend stack for Symfony. Build reactive UIs with minimal JavaScript using server-rendered HTML.
Symfony UX follows a progressive enhancement philosophy: start with plain HTML, add interactivity only where needed, and prefer server-side rendering over client-side JavaScript. Each tool solves a specific problem -- pick the simplest one that fits.
Decision Tree: Which Tool?
Need frontend interactivity?
|
+-- Pure JavaScript behavior (no server)?
| -> Stimulus
| (DOM manipulation, event handling, third-party libs)
|
+-- Navigation / partial page updates?
| -> Turbo
| +-- Full page AJAX -> Turbo Drive (automatic, zero config)
| +-- Single section update -> Turbo Frame
| +-- Multiple sections -> Turbo Stream
|
+-- Reusable UI component?
| |
| +-- Static (no live updates)?
| | -> TwigComponent
| | (props, blocks, computed properties)
| |
| +-- Dynamic (re-renders on interaction)?
| -> LiveComponent
| (data binding, actions, forms, real-time validation)
|
+-- Real-time (WebSocket/SSE)?
-> Turbo Stream + Mercure
The tools compose naturally. A typical page uses Turbo Drive for navigation, Turbo Frames for partial sections, TwigComponents for reusable UI elements, LiveComponents for reactive forms/search, and Stimulus for client-side behavior that doesn't need a server round-trip.
Quick Comparison
| Feature | Stimulus | Turbo | TwigComponent | LiveComponent |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| JavaScript required | Yes (minimal) | No | No | No |
| Server re-render | No | Yes (page/frame) | No | Yes (AJAX) |
| State management | JS only | URL/Server | Props (immutable) | LiveProp (mutable) |
| Two-way binding | Manual | No | No | data-model |
| Real-time capable | Manual | Yes (Streams+Mercure) | No | Yes (polling/emit) |
| Lazy loading | Yes (stimulusFetch) | Yes (lazy frames) | No | Yes (defer/lazy) |
Installation
# All core packages
composer require symfony/ux-turbo symfony/stimulus-bundle \
symfony/ux-twig-component symfony/ux-live-component
# Individual
composer require symfony/stimulus-bundle # Stimulus
composer require symfony/ux-turbo # Turbo
composer require symfony/ux-twig-component # TwigComponent
composer require symfony/ux-live-component # LiveComponent (includes TwigComponent)
Common Patterns
Pattern 1: Static Component (TwigComponent)
Reusable UI with no interactivity. Use for buttons, cards, alerts, badges.
#[AsTwigComponent]
final class Alert
{
public string $type = 'info';
public string $message;
}
{# templates/components/Alert.html.twig #}
<div class="alert alert-{{ type }}" {{ attributes }}>
{{ message }}
</div>
<twig:Alert type="success" message="Saved!" />
Pattern 2: Component + JS Behavior (TwigComponent + Stimulus)
Server-rendered component with client-side interactivity. Use when the interaction is purely cosmetic (toggling, animations, third-party JS libs) and doesn't need server data.
#[AsTwigComponent]
final class Dropdown
{
public string $label;
}
{# templates/components/Dropdown.html.twig #}
<div data-controller="dropdown" {{ attributes }}>
<button data-action="click->dropdown#toggle">{{ label }}</button>
<div data-dropdown-target="menu" hidden>
{% block content %}{% endblock %}
</div>
</div>
Pattern 3: Server-Reactive Component (LiveComponent)
Component that re-renders via AJAX on user input. Use for search boxes, filters, forms with real-time validation, anything that needs server data on every interaction.
#[AsLiveComponent]
final class SearchBox
{
use DefaultActionTrait;
#[LiveProp(writable: true, url: true)]
public string $query = '';
public function __construct(
private readonly ProductRepository $products,
) {}
public function getResults(): array
{
return $this->products->search($this->query);
}
}
<div {{ attributes }}>
<input data-model="debounce(300)|query" placeholder="Search...">
<div data-loading="addClass(opacity-50)">
{% for item in this.results %}
<div>{{ item.name }}</div>
{% endfor %}
</div>
</div>
Pattern 4: Frame-Based Navigation (Turbo Frame)
Partial page updates without full reload. Use for pagination, inline editing, tabbed content, modals loaded from server.
<turbo-frame id="product-list">
{% for product in products %}
<a href="{{ path('product_show', {id: product.id}) }}">
{{ product.name }}
</a>
{% endfor %}
</turbo-frame>
Pattern 5: Multi-Section Update (Turbo Stream)
Update multiple page areas from a single server response. Use after form submissions that affect several parts of the page.
#[Route('/comments', methods: ['POST'])]
public function create(Request $request): Response
{
// ... save comment
$request->setRequestFormat(TurboBundle::STREAM_FORMAT);
return $this->render('comment/create.stream.html.twig', [
'comment' => $comment,
'count' => $count,
]);
}
{# create.stream.html.twig #}
<turbo-stream action="append" target="comments">
<template>{{ include('comment/_comment.html.twig') }}</template>
</turbo-stream>
<turbo-stream action="update" target="comment-count">
<template>{{ count }}</template>
</turbo-stream>
You can also use the Twig component syntax:
<twig:Turbo:Stream:Append target="comments">
{{ include('comment/_comment.html.twig') }}
</twig:Turbo:Stream:Append>
Pattern 6: LiveComponent Inside Turbo Frame
Combine for complex UIs -- the frame scopes navigation, the LiveComponent handles reactivity within that scope.
<turbo-frame id="search-section">
<twig:ProductSearch />
</turbo-frame>
Pattern 7: Real-Time Updates (Mercure + Turbo Stream)
Broadcast server-side events to all connected browsers via SSE.
use Symfony\UX\Turbo\Attribute\Broadcast;
#[Broadcast]
class Message
{
// Entity changes broadcast automatically
}
<turbo-stream-source src="{{ mercure('chat')|escape('html_attr') }}">
</turbo-stream-source>
<div id="messages">...</div>
When to Use What
Stimulus -- Adding JS behavior to existing HTML, integrating third-party libraries (charts, datepickers, maps), client-only interactions (toggles, tabs, clipboard), anything where you need full control over JavaScript execution.
Turbo Drive -- SPA-like navigation. Automatic, zero config. Just install and all links/forms become AJAX. Opt out selectively with data-turbo="false".
Turbo Frames -- Loading or updating a single page section: inline editing, pagination within a section, modal content loading, lazy-loaded sidebar.
Turbo Streams -- Updating multiple page sections at once, real-time broadcasts (with Mercure), flash messages after form submit, delete confirmations that update a list and a counter.
TwigComponent -- Reusable UI elements (buttons, cards, alerts, form widgets), consistent styling and markup, no server interaction needed after initial render, component composition and nesting.
LiveComponent -- Forms with real-time validation, search with live results, data binding (like Vue/React but server-rendered), any component whose state changes based on user interaction, when you want to avoid writing JavaScript entirely.
Combining Tools
+-----------------------------------------------------+
| Page |
| +------------------------------------------------+ |
| | Turbo Drive (automatic full-page AJAX) | |
| | +------------------------------------------+ | |
| | | Turbo Frame (partial section) | | |
| | | +------------------------------------+ | | |
| | | | LiveComponent (reactive) | | | |
| | | | +------------------------------+ | | | |
| | | | | TwigComponent (static) | | | | |
| | | | | + Stimulus (JS behavior) | | | | |
| | | | +------------------------------+ | | | |
| | | +------------------------------------+ | | |
| | +------------------------------------------+ | |
| +------------------------------------------------+ |
+-----------------------------------------------------+
File Structure
src/
Twig/
Components/
Alert.php # TwigComponent
Button.php # TwigComponent
SearchBox.php # LiveComponent
ProductForm.php # LiveComponent
templates/
components/
Alert.html.twig
Button.html.twig
SearchBox.html.twig
ProductForm.html.twig
assets/
controllers/
dropdown_controller.js # Stimulus
modal_controller.js # Stimulus
chart_controller.js # Stimulus
Anti-Patterns to Avoid
Don't use LiveComponent for static content. If a component never re-renders after initial load, use TwigComponent instead -- LiveComponent adds unnecessary overhead (AJAX requests, state serialization).
Don't use Turbo Streams when a Frame is enough. If you're only updating one section of the page, a Turbo Frame is simpler and requires no special response format.
Don't reach for Stimulus when Turbo handles it. Before writing a Stimulus controller for a link or form interaction, check if Turbo Drive/Frames already handle it.
Don't fight Turbo Drive. If a link or form behaves oddly with Turbo, the fix is usually to ensure the server returns a proper full HTML page, not to disable Turbo.
Related Skills
For detailed documentation on each tool, read the dedicated skill:
- Stimulus: Controllers, targets, values, actions, outlets, lazy loading
- Turbo: Drive, Frames, Streams, Mercure integration,
<twig:Turbo:Stream:*>components - TwigComponent: Props, blocks, computed properties, anonymous components, attributes
- LiveComponent: LiveProp, LiveAction, data-model, forms, emit/listen, polling, defer/lazy