[wp-hackers] next day's post / previous days post

Mark Shields marks at ibbsonline.com
Mon Jun 28 12:56:52 UTC 2004


You can still get the original version from 
http://technicallyincorrect.org/index.php?p=92.   I would highly 
recommend you do not use it though, as it is riddled with bugs, missing 
features, and the like.  I am in the process of rewriting it, and am 
nearly finished, but I have hit a wall.  When I call the_category() with 
or without paremeters I always receive an SQL error and a PHP warning.  
I filed a bug report 
(http://mosquito.wordpress.org/bug_view_advanced_page.php?bug_id=0000126) 
about 3 days ago, but nobody has responded yet.  It only occurs in 
versions higher than 1.2-mingus though, so if you are using 1.2-mingus 
you can safely use it.  Thus I have not released it to public yet, but 
if you would like you can download it at 
http://technicallyincorrect.org/phpsrc/plugins/breadcrumb/beta/breadcrumb.phps 
.  I wish my webhost did PHP syntax highlighting :(

scriptygoddess wrote:

>I've got most of the plugin I needed done here:
>http://www.scriptygoddess.com/archives/2004/06/27/previous-archive-date-next-archive-date-links/
>but because I'm relying on getting that current archive page via the
>"$_GET['m'] - obviously, with permalinks, it's not working...
>
>Mark - I take it combined with your plugin, I could get that data with
>just $m? Where is your breadcrumb plugin?
>
>Matt - YES! That's where I saw it!! LOL! That's really weird that it's
>in the readme and nowhere in the documentation on the wiki or
>wordpress.org sites.
>
>-Jenn
>
>On Sun, 27 Jun 2004 08:42:32 -0400, Mark Shields <marks at ibbsonline.com> wrote:
>  
>
>>I can help with that.  The breadcrumb plugin I (re-)wrote uses $p, $cat,
>>$author, $m, $s.  It also uses $single to detect if you're viewing a
>>single post (that was added by Laughing Lizard, but isn't actually a
>>variable value you can change via $_GET, so my point is moot).
>>
>>The $cat returns the category ID (which does correspond to the category
>>name, description, etc.).  $p  returns the post ID (which corresponds to
>>the post name, etc.).  $author and $m return pretty much the same.  $s
>>returns a search string.
>>
>>
>>scriptygoddess wrote:
>>
>>    
>>
>>>Unfortunately no. While I can't find the documentation, I played
>>>around with it... maybe someone can just verify my assumptions about
>>>the query strings?
>>>
>>>?p= will show the postid
>>>
>>>?m= will always show an archive page in the following manner
>>>
>>>?m=YYYY (year archive for YYYY year)
>>>?m=YYYYMM (month archive...)
>>>?m=YYYYMMDD (day archive...)
>>>(Is there any other combinations for the ?m= query string?)
>>>
>>>What other query strings are there?
>>>The template page talks about a cat querystring ?cat=
>>>I think that just takes a number (which corresponds to the id of the
>>>category) ?? (confirm? deny?) :)
>>>
>>>
>>>-----------------------------------------
>>>www.scriptygoddess.com
>>>www.theworkingmom.net
>>>
>>>_______________________________________________
>>>hackers mailing list
>>>hackers at wordpress.org
>>>http://wordpress.org/mailman/listinfo/hackers_wordpress.org
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>      
>>>
>>_______________________________________________
>>hackers mailing list
>>hackers at wordpress.org
>>http://wordpress.org/mailman/listinfo/hackers_wordpress.org
>>
>>    
>>
>
>
>  
>




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