WordPress Templates Cookbook

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Overview

Documentation on how to set up various common features in WordPress.

Inserting a custom content template in a page

  • Within the top-level WordPress template (e.g. page.php)
<?php get_template_part( 'modules-sidebar-donate-link' ); ?>
  • The string passed as the argument to get_template_part() corresponds to a WordPress template in the themes directory. So 'modules-sidebar-donate-link' means there should be a template named modules-sidebar-donate-link.php.
  • Template markup goes in the template file (modules-sidebar-donate-link.php in this case).
    • Content can be retrieved within the template using WP_Query().
<?php $query = new WP_Query("post_parent=123&post_type='page'&orderby=order&order=ASC"); /* 123 = "landing page slideshow" page */ ?>
    • Then a loop would be created within the template:
<?php if ($query->have_posts()) while($query->have_posts()): $query->the_post(); ?>
<div><!--// Content inserted here using markup and WP content retrieval methods. //--></div>
<?php endwhile; ?>

Sub-navigation within pages

When landing on a content section page, load a sub-navigation menu dynamically using pages that have that top-level content section page as their parent.

Example: http://rsrt.dbarchowsky.com/about-rsrt/

  • Create the top-level page (as a WordPress "page", not a WP "post"). The page can have any sort of content.
  • Create 2nd-level pages and assign the top-level page as their parent.
  • Create a template for the sub-navigation menu, i.e. page-navmenu.php.
  • Include the page navigation menu inside the loop.
get_template_part('page-navmenu');
  • Inside the sub-navigation menu template:
  • Get the id of the parent page:
$top_parent_id = 0;
if ($post->ancestors) {
    //  Grab the ID of top-level page from the tree
    $top_parent_id = end($post->ancestors);
}

//get the top menu parent ID. If this is a top menu page, the page will not have a parent
$parent_id = (($top_parent_id>0)?($top_parent_id):($post->ID));
  • Fetch and loop through results
<?php
$pagemenu = new WP_Query("post_parent={$parent_id}&post_type='page'&orderby=menu_order&order=ASC&showposts=20");
if ($pagemenu->have_posts()) while($pagemenu->have_posts()): $pagemenu->the_post(); ?>
	<li><a href="<?php the_permalink(); ?>"><?php the_title(); ?></a></li>
<?php endwhile; ?>
  • To test for the item representing the page that's currently loaded in the browser to treat its link differently:
/* outside the loop get the current page id */
$currentPageID= ($post->post_parent==$top_parent_id)?($post->ID):($post->post_parent);

/* (start of the loop code would go here) */

	/* inside the loop, check the id of the menu item against the current page id */
	$currentMenuItemID = get_the_ID();
	if ($currentMenuItemID == $currentPageID) {
		/* treat the link to indicate that this is the current page */
	}
	else {
		/* all other links treated normally */
	}

Galleries

Implemented with the NextGEN Gallery plugin.

Installation

  • WP dashboard > Plugins > Add New
  • Enter "NextGEN Gallery" in Search
  • Install and make sure to click the Activate link after installation has completed.

Configuration

  • WP dashboard > Gallery (only visible to Admin-level users) > Add Gallery/Images
  • Enter the name of the gallery & submit.
  • Upload images.
  • (optional) WP dashboard > Gallery > Manage Gallery
    • Select the gallery to work on.
    • (optional) Enter titles and descriptions for the images in the gallery.
    • (optional) Click Sort Gallery and drag'n'drop to arrange the display order of the images.
  • WP dashboard > Gallery > Options
    • Thumbnails tab
      • Set thumbnails width & height here
      • It's necessary to re-create the thumbnails for the Gallery under Gallery > Manage Gallery after changing their dimensions.
    • Gallery tab
      • Hide the "[Show as Slideshow]" link here.
  • Stylesheet
    • /wordpress/wp-content/themes/[SITE_THEME]/style.css
    • .entry-content img defines the border and padding for the thumbnail images.
    • /wordpress/wp-content/plugins/nextgen-gallery/css/nggallery.css
    • .ngg-gallery-thumbnail img defines padding and margin around thumbnail images.
    • /wordpress/wp-content/plugins/nextgen-gallery/shutter/shutter-reloaded.css
    • #shName Color of text in lightbox slideshow.

Displaying on a page

  • Edit a page or post.
  • After the NextGEN Gallery plugin is installed a new button for NextGEN Galleries is added to the WYSIWYG editor buttons.
  • Click that button and select the gallery from the dropdown list.

Creating groups within a page

Example: Sara Varon: Books

Example: Sara Varon: Friends

  • Advanced Custom Fields plugin here and here
  • Assign a custom variable to the sub-page.
  • Retrieve all valid custom variable values for the page grouping.
$parent_id = $post->ID;
/* with these arguments, only pages that have a "book_group" custom field value will be retrieved */
$args = array(
	'post_parent' => $parent_id,
	'post_type' => 'page',
	'meta_key' => 'book_group',
	'orderby' => 'meta_value menu_order',
	'order' => 'ASC'
);
$pagemenu = new WP_Query($args);
  • Access the custom variable values within "the loop" using methods supplied with the Advanced Custom Field plugin.
<? the_field('book_group') ?>
  • The value of the custom field can be assigned to a variable (also using methods supplied by ACF plugin).
<? $book_group = get_field('book_group') ?>

Displaying dates

  • The WordPress functions the_date() and the_time() functions will insert the date into a page.
  • By default the_date() prints the date to the browser. Passing TRUE as its 4th argument will return the date value as a string instead.
$my_date = the_date('F j, Y', '', '', true);
  • the_date() will not print or return the date for any posts with dates that match the date of a previous post. Use the_time() instead for this behavior.

Linking a page to an external URL or another page

Page Links To plugin

  • Page Links To plugin
  • The drawback of this is the the URL displayed in the browser's address bar will be the target URL.

.htaccess

  • This doesn't seem to work. WordPress gets the original URL either way and works with that to serve up its content. If the original URL doesn't match a page or post in WP, you get an error.

Creating a placeholder PHP page in a physical directory

  • I was getting errors with this, it think because of the discrepancy between the directory levels of the various pages. Also, WordPress expects the site to be at a certain location as defined in the Dashboard settings. Pages that aren't at that location probably cause problems.