A PHP toolkit to boost your WordPress development! π
Install the package via Composer:
composer require studiometa/wp-toolkit
Requirements
- PHP >=7.3
// Create Custom Post Type
use Studiometa\WPToolkit\Builders\PostTypeBuilder;
$cpt = new PostTypeBuilder( 'product' );
$cpt->set_labels( 'Product', 'Products' )
->set_has_archive( true )
->register();
// Create Custom Taxonomy
use Studiometa\WPToolkit\Builders\TaxonomyBuilder;
$tax = new TaxonomyBuilder( 'product-cat' );
$tax->set_post_types( 'product' )
->set_labels( 'Product Category', 'Product Categories' )
->register();
// Create a manager
use Studiometa\WPToolkit\Managers\ManagerInterface;
class CustomManager implements ManagerInterface {
run() {
add_action( 'init', array( $this, 'some_action' ) );
}
some_action() {
// do something on init
}
}
// Init all managers
use Studiometa\WPToolkit\Managers\ManagerFactory;
use Studiometa\WPToolkit\Managers\AssetsManager;
use Studiometa\WPToolkit\Managers\CleanupManager;
ManagerFactory::init(
array(
new AssetsManager(),
new CleanupManager(),
new CustomManager()
)
);
The AssetsManager
manager does the heavy lifting of registering and enqueuing assets for you. It works with a configuration file in YAML with the following format:
<template-name-or-all>:
css:
<asset-id>: <asset-path-in-theme>
js:
<asset-id>: <asset-path-in-theme>
If used with our Webpack configuration package, you can also specify entrypoints and all their dependencies to be registered and enqueued.
all:
entries:
- css/app.scss
- js/app.js
new AssetsManager(
get_template_directory() . '/config/assets.yml',
get_template_directory() . '/dist/assets-manifest.json',
);
$configuration_filepath
(string
): path to theconfig.yml
file, defaults toconfig/assets.yml
in your theme.$webpack_manifest_filepath
(string
), path to the Webpack assets manifest file, defaults todist/assets-manifest.json
in your theme.
Functions to interact with WordPress behaviour.
use Studiometa\WPToolkit\Helpers\PluginHelper;
// Check if a specified plugin is enable.
use Studiometa\WPToolkit\Helpers\PluginHelper;
PluginHelper::is_plugin_enabled( 'my-plugin/my-plugin.php' );
Important Transients keys must be prefixed with transient cleaner prefix (
TransientCleaner::PREFIX
) to be tracked.
use Studiometa\WPToolkit\TransientCleaner;
// 1. Set a transient with transient cleaner prefix.
if ( $my_condition ) {
set_transient(
TransientCleaner::PREFIX . 'transient_key',
'example'
);
}
// 2. Initialize transient cleaner.
$transient_cleaner = TransientCleaner::get_instance(
array(
'post' => array(
'all' => array(
TransientCleaner::PREFIX . 'transient_key',
),
'post_type_key' => array(
TransientCleaner::PREFIX . 'transient_key',
TransientCleaner::PREFIX . 'transient_key_1',
)
),
'term' => array(
'all' => array(),
'your_taxonomy_type_key' => array(),
'category' => array(),
),
'option' => array(
'all' => array(),
'option_key' => array(),
'blogdescription' => array(),
),
)
);
// Update config if needed.
$transient_cleaner->set_config(array());
// 3. Insert/Update post/term/option to see your transients deleted based on your config.
# WP-tests must be installed before run PHPUnit (required a test MySQL database).
./bin/install-wp-tests.sh [dbname] [dbuser] [dbpasswd] [dbhost] [test_version]
composer run-script phpunit
Tests can be run in ddev which preconfigures the WordPress environment when starting:
ddev start
ddev exec phpunit
To test against different PHP version, you can edit the .ddev/config.yaml
file and change the php_version
property.