Simple routing for WordPress.
This package is a re-organised and maintained version of Upstatement/routes
Require WP Routes with composer
$ composer require devaly/wordpress-routes
Download the WP Routes from Releases assets wordpress-routes.zip and install as wordpress plugin
/* functions.php */
Routes::map('myfoo/bar', 'my_callback_function');
Routes::map('my-events/:event', function($params) {
$event_slug = $params['event'];
$event = new ECP_Event($event_slug);
$query = new WPQuery(); //if you want to send a custom query to the page's main loop
Routes::load('single.php', array('event' => $event), $query, 200);
});
Using routes makes it easy for you to implement custom pagination — and anything else you might imagine in your wildest dreams of URLs and parameters. OMG so easy!
In your functions.php file, this can be called anywhere (don't hook it to init or another action or it might be called too late)
<?php
Routes::map('blog/:name', function($params){
$query = 'posts_per_page=3&post_type='.$params['name'];
Routes::load('archive.php', null, $query, 200);
});
Routes::map('blog/:name/page/:pg', function($params){
$query = 'posts_per_page=3&post_type='.$params['name'].'&paged='.$params['pg'];
$params = array('thing' => 'foo', 'bar' => 'I dont even know');
Routes::load('archive.php', $params, $query);
});
Routes::map($pattern, $callback)
A functions.php
where I want to display custom paginated content:
<?php
Routes::map('info/:name/page/:pg', function($params){
//make a custom query based on incoming path and run it...
$query = 'posts_per_page=3&post_type='.$params['name'].'&paged='.intval($params['pg']);
//load up a template which will use that query
Routes::load('archive.php', null, $query);
});
$pattern
(required)
Set a pattern for Routes to match on, by default everything is handled as a string. Any segment that begins with a :
is handled as a variable, for example:
To paginate:
page/:pagenum
To edit a user:
my-users/:userid/edit
$callback
A function that should fire when the pattern matches the request. Callback takes one argument which is an array of the parameters passed in the URL.
So in this example: 'info/:name/page/:pg'
, $params would have data for:
$data['name']
$data['pg']
... which you can use in the callback function as a part of your query
Routes::load($php_file, $args, $query = null, $status_code = 200)
$php_file
(required)
A PHP file to load, in my experience this is usually your archive.php or a generic listing page (but don't worry it can be anything!)
$template_params
Any data you want to send to the resulting view. Example:
<?php
/* functions.php */
Routes::map('info/:name/page/:pg', function($params){
//make a custom query based on incoming path and run it...
$query = 'posts_per_page=3&post_type='.$params['name'].'&paged='.intval($params['pg']);
//load up a template which will use that query
$params = array();
$params['my_title'] = 'This is my custom title';
Routes::load('archive.php', $params, $query, 200);
});
<?php
/* archive.php */
global $params;
$context['wp_title'] = $params['my_title']; // "This is my custom title"
/* the rest as normal... */
Timber::render('archive.twig', $context);
$query
The query you want to use, it can accept a string or array just like Timber::get_posts
-- use the standard WP_Query syntax (or a WP_Query object too)
$status_code
Send an optional status code. Defaults to 200 for 'Success/OK'