Oow is a library that contains components to ease WordPress plugin development.
If you are familiar with how Doctrine2 works, there is just a little to explain. There is a PluginManager
to handle your standalone plugin classes by reading annotations. Don't worry if this doesn't make any sense to you. Continue to read. :)
PluginManager
is at the heart of the library and all classes is registered to WordPress hooks with it.
Plugins are just standalone PHP classes. They don't have to extend any base class and don't have to follow any naming conventions. Annotations in docblocks are used to handle classes.
- PHP 5.3.2 and up
- Doctrine Annotations library to process annotations
with Composer
Add eabay/oow
as a dependency in your composer.json
file.
First create a plugin class:
<?php
namespace Plugins;
/** @Plugin */
class HelloWorld
{
/** @Hook(tag="wp_footer",priority=50) */
public function sayHello()
{
echo 'Hello World';
}
}
Go to your plugin file and register your plugin with PluginManager
;
<?php
/*
Plugin Name: Hello World
*/
use Oow\Plugin\PluginManager;
use Plugins\HelloWorld;
$manager = new PluginManager;
$manager->addPlugin(new HelloWorld);
This will print Hello World in the page footer. Check https://github.com/eabay/oow-sample-plugin for sample plugin.
You are free to create your classes as you want. @Plugin
class annotation makes your class a plugin and @Hook
method annotation hooks your its methods to actions and filters. If you semantically distinguish you action and filter hooks you can use @Action
and @Filter
annotations in method docblocks. Those are just synonyms and do exactly the same.
The parameters of @Hook
is the same as add_filter function except that function_to_add is the method you assign and accepted_args is the number of arguments that method has. priority is optional and its default is 10.
Please check Doctrine Annotations documentation to learn more about annotations.
Fork the project, create a feature branch, and send me a pull request.