[theme-reviewers] add_theme_page()

Philip M. Hofer (Frumph) philip at frumph.net
Tue Jan 25 08:19:44 UTC 2011


Yup, that works for me, added to actual page


  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Rahul Bansal 
  To: theme-reviewers at lists.wordpress.org 
  Sent: Tuesday, January 25, 2011 12:14 AM
  Subject: Re: [theme-reviewers] add_theme_page()


    If you have any links that you would like added to the make.wordpress.org/themes site, sure pass em over
  Cool. Added it here - http://make.wordpress.org/themes/about/resources/ via comment form. 
  Daniel really made everything so simple!



  --
  Rahul Bansal | Founder & CEO | rtCamp Solutions Pvt. Ltd.
  Mobile: +91-9860501882 | Web: http://rtcamp.com/




  On Tue, Jan 25, 2011 at 1:39 PM, Philip M. Hofer (Frumph) <philip at frumph.net> wrote:

    If you have any links that you would like added to the make.wordpress.org/themes site, sure pass em over

    i'll see who'se handling those pages and talk to them about it


      ----- Original Message ----- 
      From: Rahul Bansal 
      To: theme-reviewers at lists.wordpress.org 
      Sent: Monday, January 24, 2011 11:49 PM
      Subject: Re: [theme-reviewers] add_theme_page()


      Really good - added to our internal wiki. We all will be surely using this way only going ahead! :-) 


      @WPTRT
      Just a suggestion - if such tutorials can be collected somewhere for easy reference and then everytime you recommends something, you may share a link to alternative (and better) solution that is acceptable.
      I know this will be extra work for you so a page on codex may be devoted for this where dev may find quick-help.


      --
      Rahul Bansal | Founder & CEO | rtCamp Solutions Pvt. Ltd.
      Mobile: +91-9860501882 | Web: http://rtcamp.com/




      On Tue, Jan 25, 2011 at 8:11 AM, Amy <sabreuse at gmail.com> wrote:

        Fantastic tutorial, Daniel - definitely one that I'll be coming back to.  


        On Jan 24, 2011, at 9:07 PM, Josh Stauffer <joshstauffer at gmail.com> wrote:


          And a tweet from me.

          Josh



          On Mon, Jan 24, 2011 at 7:38 PM, Edward Caissie <edward.caissie at gmail.com> wrote:

            Added a Tweet, too ... 



            On Mon, Jan 24, 2011 at 6:55 PM, Emil Uzelac <emil at themeid.com> wrote:

              Good job, tweeted as well :)

               
              Emil Uzelac | ThemeID | T: 224-444-0006 | Twitter: @EmilUzelac | E: emil at themeid.com | http://themeid.com
              Make everything as simple as possible, but not simpler. - Albert Einstein




              On Mon, Jan 24, 2011 at 5:49 PM, Chip Bennett <chip at chipbennett.net> wrote:

                *jaw drops* 


                Now *that* is an awesome tutorial! Well done, Daniel!


                (Tweeted)


                Chip 



                On Mon, Jan 24, 2011 at 5:34 PM, Daniel Tara <contact at onedesigns.com> wrote:

                  I wrapped this into and article. Hope it helps you and all developers in need out there:



                  http://www.onedesigns.com/tutorials/separate-multiple-theme-options-pages-using-tabs







                  From: theme-reviewers-bounces at lists.wordpress.org [mailto:theme-reviewers-bounces at lists.wordpress.org] On Behalf Of Sayontan Sinha
                  Sent: Monday, January 24, 2011 11:24 PM


                  To: theme-reviewers at lists.wordpress.org
                  Subject: Re: [theme-reviewers] add_theme_page()



                  That would be a relief. Let me give it a try.

                  On Mon, Jan 24, 2011 at 1:12 PM, Daniel Tara <contact at onedesigns.com> wrote:

                  Creating tabs is as easy as this:



                  function sayontan_admin_tabs( $current = 'general' ) {

                                  $tabs = array( 'general' => 'General', 'layput' => 'Layout', 'advanced' => 'Advanced' );

                                  $links = array();

                                  foreach( $tabs as $tab => $name ) :

                                                  if ( $current == $tab ) :

                                                                  $links[] = "<a class='nav-tab nav-tab-active' href='?page=sayontan_options&tab=$tab'>$name</a>";

                                                  else :

                                                                  $links[] = "<a class='nav-tab' href='?page=sayontan_options&tab=$tab'>$name</a>";

                                                  endif;

                                  endforeach;

                                  foreach ( $links as $link )

                                                  echo $link;

                  }



                  if ( isset ( $_GET['tab'] ) ) :

                                  $tab = $_GET['tab'];

                  else:

                                  $tab = 'general';

                  endif;

                  switch ( $tab ) :

                                  case 'general' :

                                  // Whatever

                                  break;

                                  ...

                  endswitch;



                  From: theme-reviewers-bounces at lists.wordpress.org [mailto:theme-reviewers-bounces at lists.wordpress.org] On Behalf Of Sayontan Sinha
                  Sent: Monday, January 24, 2011 10:47 PM
                  To: theme-reviewers at lists.wordpress.org


                  Subject: Re: [theme-reviewers] add_theme_page()



                    Ideally, it would still have just one Theme Options page under


                    appearance, and then use tabs or something else on its own page to
                    separate the options out.


                  This is much easier said than done. I have been working towards getting tabs in place on one page (multiple calls to add_theme_page makes things look quite ugly), but there are simply too many limitations with the whole API to make this work effectively. Let me try to explain.

                  The Scenario:
                  My theme has several options. Putting them all on one page causes a lot of issues, like sluggishness of the back-end and interference with PHP-Suhosin protection settings (though Suhosin can be tweaked). I originally had a 2-level tab system, with horizontal tabs at the top for different sections of settings, then vertical tabs within each section (that is similar to the kind of settings that the other folks are talking about). The tabs were all handled by JQuery. This works fine with a small number of options, but with a large number of options, the sluggishness shows up in the back-end. That was when I removed the horizontal tabs at the top level and used add_menu_page and add_submenu_page.

                  But with the recent enforcements of new rules and recommendations, I have had to do some major rework. I first rewrote the options framework to use the Settings API, but still with add_menu_page and add_submenu_page. Now I am rewriting again to get rid of the additional menu and roll it back to how the look was earlier, but with a difference: the entire set of options will not be loaded into browser memory in JQuery tabs. Instead, I will try to fetch each page as it is clicked, like the Theme Installation page in WP.

                  My attempts:

                    1.. I first simply created one options page, then included a set of links at the top. 
                    Issue: Getting the links to behave as belonging within WP. E.g. If your admin panel is at http://host.com/wp-admin, your theme options page could be at http://host.com/wp-admin/themes.php?page=my-options. The tabs, however cannot be given links through the admin panel. In other words, to get a URL such as http://host.com/wp-admin/themes.php?page=my-sub-options-1, I HAVE to use add_theme_page. If I don't use add_theme_page, the page isn't added to the whitelist and will not show up. I cannot use other URLs, because then I will have something like this: http://host.com/wp-content/themes/my-theme/my-sub-options-1.php, which is just not done. 
                    2.. To get around the above, I decided to bundle AJAX with the options page. So I have one options page accessible through http://host.com/wp-admin/themes.php?page=my-options. In there I have 5 links, each of which invokes AJAX to load the specific options page, while staying in http://host.com/wp-admin/themes.php?page=my-options. This way I only need to whitelist the main page.
                    Issue: Getting settings_fields() to generate _wp_http_referer different from admin-ajax.php. This is causing options.php to return admin-ajax.php?updated=true, which is not what I want. This is where I am stuck right now, but hopefully I will get over the hurdle soon. 
                  I am looking forward to completing this exercise, so that other developers can learn from my (rather harsh) experience here.

                  Cheers,
                  Sayontan.

                  On Mon, Jan 24, 2011 at 11:08 AM, Otto <otto at ottodestruct.com> wrote:

                  On Mon, Jan 24, 2011 at 1:03 PM, Rahul Bansal <rahul286 at gmail.com> wrote:
                  > What if theme offers so many options that it need to contains 4-5 subpages?

                  Ideally, it would still have just one Theme Options page under
                  appearance, and then use tabs or something else on its own page to
                  separate the options out.

                  Realistically, I'd say a theme with that many options is too complex
                  to begin with. Themes should be about the look of the site, not crazy
                  functionality. Break the functionality parts out into plugins that go
                  along with the theme or something like that.

                  -Otto

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                  -- 
                  Sayontan Sinha
                  http://mynethome.net | http://mynethome.net/blog
                  --
                  Beating Australia in Cricket is like killing a celebrity. The death gets more coverage than the crime.


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                  -- 
                  Sayontan Sinha
                  http://mynethome.net | http://mynethome.net/blog
                  --
                  Beating Australia in Cricket is like killing a celebrity. The death gets more coverage than the crime.


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