[wp-hackers] Regional Author Groups and Permission

Guus (IFS) guus at inspiration-for-success.com
Tue Aug 13 08:19:08 UTC 2013


Yes, if they're aldeady using it it may be the best option. But I'm still a 
simple web developer that just prefers to write 'simple' php/html and just 
submit simple pages :).

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "David Churchill" <davinian at mac.com>
To: <wp-hackers at lists.automattic.com>
Sent: Monday, August 12, 2013 11:54 PM
Subject: Re: [wp-hackers] Regional Author Groups and Permission


Thank Guus,

Used to use Joomla a lot a few years ago, but found it painful to use and 
clients never liked using it. Will look at Zend, but think I'll try and 
stick with WordPress if I can as client already uses it and would be easier 
to pass on if I every leave.

Cheers, Dave



On 12 Aug 2013, at 16:37, Guus (IFS) <guus at inspiration-for-success.com> 
wrote:

> Hi David,
>
> I developed my own 'developer' framework that is suitable for advanced 
> custom build database driven websites, but if you want Open Source I would 
> look into Joomla or Zend or something like that. There are more, but those 
> are the ones I know a bit.
>
> Wordpress in my opinion is good for simple websites and blogging, but is 
> not that suitable for advanced web applications,
>
> Guus
>
>
>
> ----- Original Message ----- From: "David Churchill" <davinian at mac.com>
> To: <wp-hackers at lists.automattic.com>
> Sent: Sunday, August 11, 2013 8:56 PM
> Subject: Re: [wp-hackers] Regional Author Groups and Permission
>
>
> Hi Guus,
> Do you have any other framework suggestions?
> David
>
> On 11 Aug 2013, at 07:11, Guus (IFS) wrote:
>
>> Why use Wordpress for something like that? Might be easier to build with 
>> some other framework.
>>
>> ----- Original Message ----- From: "David Churchill" <davinian at mac.com>
>> To: <wp-hackers at lists.automattic.com>
>> Sent: Friday, August 09, 2013 6:17 PM
>> Subject: [wp-hackers] Regional Author Groups and Permission
>>
>>
>> Hi, I need some advice on the best way to approach building an 
>> event/booking website with multi author support.
>>
>> The idea is one website listing lots of regional events. Users can 
>> geo-search events based on name, town, city and zip/post code with a 
>> distance radius in miles (5,10,25 etc). Then book the event online via 
>> PayPal and other payment gateways.
>>
>> I have all of this working using Events Calendar Pro (Modern Tribe), Geo 
>> my WP (free plugin) for the geo-search, WooCommerce and WooTickets for 
>> the booking/tickets/payments.
>>
>> What I am struggling with is how best to setup regional authors. I would 
>> ideally like to create regional groups with a main coordinator and a 
>> number of event publishers under the each region.
>>
>> Each publisher will be able to create/publish edit/delete their own 
>> events, but not any other publishers (ideally other publishers events 
>> need to be hidden in the backend). The coordinators will be able to 
>> create/publish and edit/delete their own events and those belonging to 
>> the publishers in the same group (so see all events by all publishers in 
>> the same regional group). They will be able to publish events on behalf 
>> of the publishers, so will need to be able to select the author in the 
>> Author drop-down list. There will be a number of regional groups and all 
>> the events in each group will need to be hidden from the other groups. 
>> Hope this is making sense?
>>
>> I have looked at a number of group based plugins, but they all appear to 
>> work by setting the permissions on a per event (post) based system which 
>> will not work as it will rely on publishers setting this very time.
>>
>> I have also looked at a network/mu install of WordPress and think this is 
>> probably the best approach, but Events Calendar Pro currently doesn't 
>> support sharing the events back to the main network site — ideally all mu 
>> sites will only be used for adding content and not visible by the end 
>> user.
>>
>> There is another event plugin called Events Organiser Pro which does 
>> support mu integration and saves all events in the main network sites db 
>> but doesn't support WooCommerce.
>>
>> Another possible idea would be to create front-end templates for 
>> publishers so that they can add/edit and view their own events.
>>
>> So (apologies for long-winded question), but does anybody have any 
>> recommendations or suggestions for managing groups and users where their 
>> content is ring-fenced/hidden from other groups/users. I'm happy to hack 
>> code if this is something that could be done in code.
>>
>> Thanks in advance,
>> David
>>
>>
>>
>>
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