I am using woocommerce (free plugin).. I am trying to add one custom field to the billing fields..
here it is:
// ADDED HOW YOU GOT TO KNOW ABOUT OUR SERVICE FIELD
add_filter( 'woocommerce_checkout_fields' , 'About_Our_Service' );
// Our hooked in function - $fields is passed via the filter!
function About_Our_Service( $fields ) {
$fields['billing']['billing_meat'] = array(
'label' => __('How you Got to Know About Our Service?', 'woocommerce'),
'placeholder' => _x('', 'placeholder', 'woocommerce'),
'required' => false,
'clear' => false,
'type' => 'select',
'options' => array(
'google-ads' => __('Google', 'woocommerce' ),
'google-search' => __('Yahoo', 'woocommerce' ),
'warrior-forum' => __('Bing', 'woocommerce' ),
'facebook' => __('Facebook', 'woocommerce' ),
'other' => __('Other', 'woocommerce' ),
)
);
return $fields;
}
The problem is: I am not getting the value in my mail for the custom field which was added to the billing fields.. Anyone who already used woocommerce can help me on this... ?
I already created some more custom fields which was added to the checkout (BUT these're not added along with the core fields), for these fields i'm able to get values in my mail..
By the ay, i checked this thread: but didn't much info related to mail..
please kindly someone look into this..
For future readers, custom billing/shipping fields are saved as post meta for the order post. So in general, you can retrieve them with the typical WordPress get_post_meta() function.
But in WooCommerce 2.2, you don't need to as you can pass the field name directly to an array of fields that WC will show as a list in the email:
// pre-WooCommerce 2.3
function kia_email_order_meta_keys( $keys ) {
$keys['Some field'] = '_some_field';
return $keys;
}
add_filter('woocommerce_email_order_meta_keys', 'kia_email_order_meta_keys');
This method has been deprecated in version 2.3, probably so translation can be better. As of 2.3 you will need to target a different filter and send slightly different data.
// WooCommerce 2.3+
function kia_email_order_meta_fields( $fields, $sent_to_admin, $order ) {
$fields['some_field'] = array(
'label' => __( 'Some field', 'my-plugin-textdomain' ),
'value' => get_post_meta( $order->id, '_some_field', true );
);
return $fields;
}
add_filter('woocommerce_email_order_meta_fields', 'kia_email_order_meta_keys', 10, 3 );
I wrote a tutorial on Customizing WooCommerce Checkout Fields
I believe this answer, in the codex is specifically meant for this purpose:
http://wcdocs.woothemes.com/snippets/add-a-custom-field-in-an-order-to-the-emails
I haven't implemented this myself but it's probably your best shot.
Related
im new in WordPress i wan to change my WooCommerce check out form postcode to dropdown box.. im using the solution given online but it's not work on my page.. pls help me.
here the code i put inside flatsome child function file.
add_filter( 'woocommerce_default_address_fields' , 'customize_postcode_fields' );
function customize_postcode_fields( $adresses_fields ) {
$adresses_fields['postcode']['type'] = 'select';
$adresses_fields['postcode']['options'] = array(
'' => __('Select your postcode', 'woocommerce'),
'option_1' => 'Choice 1',
'option_2' => 'Choice 2',
'option_3' => 'Choice 3'
);
return $adresses_fields;
}
and the result that i get after apply the code
my display after apply
I have updated my post from earlier which may make it easier for you to interpret and put into your code (I changed it from my last answer, as what I published wont work) - the main difference is putting the array into a variable, to make it easier to change in the future. I have done some research as well and found that the information you provided was the best option for this (so I just cleaned it up a bit). However, if you could also inspect/view-source on your code
function wpe_0987_customize_postcode_fields( $postcode_field ) {
$options = array(
'' => __( 'Select...', 'woocommerce' ),
'choice_1' => 'choice_1',
'choice_2' => 'choice_2',
'choice_3' => 'choice_3',
'choice_4' => 'choice_4'
);
$fields['billing_postcode']['type'] = 'select';
$fields['shipping_postcode']['type'] = 'select';
$fields['billing_postcode']['options'] = $options;
$fields['shipping_postcode']['options'] = $options;
return $fields;
}
For Shipping Field Only!
add_filter( 'woocommerce_shipping_fields' , 'wpe_0987_customize_postcode_fields' );
For Shipping and Billing Fields
add_filter( 'woocommerce_default_address_fields' , 'wpe_0987_customize_postcode_fields' );
Also, when you create custom functions, don't forget to put a custom prefix at the start. At the moment you have 'customize_postcode_fields', you should find a series of letters/numbers or something unique to you to ensure that it doesn't clash with any other theme/plugin - eg: 'random123_customize_postcode_fields' and use that prefix on all custom functions you create in that project.
Update:
Do an 'inspect' or 'view source' on the page, check to see what the 'name' of the postcode form is, and update it with one of the two that I have provided above (shipping_postcode, billing_postcode).
I have a form I created in a custom module using the Form API. It is a fairly basic form with only 4 fields. It basically signs a user up for a job alert system. We are basing it only by email address with a few search parameters. We want people to be able to setup a search agent quickly and anonymously meaning they will NOT be creating a Drupal user account as we don't want them to have to deal with a password etc. They will just put in their email address, check off a few preferences and we will save the data.
Now the issue I need to deal with is allowing the user to edit their preferences later on and/or unsubscribe. Again this is not high security and it doesn't need to be. What I would like to do is initially ask ONLY for their email address in the form and allow them to submit it. I would then check the database to see if we already have an entry for that email address and if so, display the pre-filled form for them to edit or unsubsribe, other wise just show them the blank form. So I am just trying to figure out the best way to go about this. I'm thinking I just have one form with all of the fields including email address, but somehow only display the other fields besides the email address after a successful call to the database. I'm just tripping up on how to accomplish this.
EDIT:
I'm wondering if I can use Drupal's AJAX functionality to accomplish this? I tried this, but I couldn't get it to work. I put an Ajax attribute on my submit button with a wrapper ID and a callback function. I created a form element in my form with blank markup and used a prefix and suffix that created a wrapper div with the ID I used in my AJAX parameter. Then I am thinking in my callback function I can do the database lookup and then return the form elements I need either pre-filled or not into the wrapper div that was created, but when I do this, the form does submit via AJAX and I get the spinning wheel, but no matter what I return in my callback, it does not appear in my output wrapper div. Am I going about this the right way? I also made sure I have $form_state['rebuild'] = TRUE; on my original form.
Here is what I tried and it didn't work.
/**
* Implements hook_form().
*/
function _vista_form($form, &$form_state) {
$form = array();
$form_state['rebuild'] = TRUE;
$form['email'] = array(
'#type' => 'textfield',
'#title' => 'Email',
'#required' => TRUE,
);
$form['render_area'] = array(
'#type' => 'markup',
'#markup' => '',
'#prefix' => '<div id="job-agent-form">',
'#suffix' => '</div>',
);
$form['submit'] = array(
'#type' => 'submit',
'#value' => t('Submit'),
'#attributes' => array('class' => array('submit')),
'#ajax' => array(
'callback' => '_display_form',
'wrapper' => 'job-agent-form',
'method' => 'replace',
'effect' => 'fade',
),
return $form;
}
function _display_form($form, &$form_state) {
// there are other form elements that would go here also, I just added two for example
$type_options = array(
'VISTA-HealthCare-Partners-Government' => 'Vista Healthcare Partners',
'International' => 'International Locum Tenens',
'Permanent' => 'Permanent Physician',
'US-Locum-Tenens' => 'US Locum Tenens',
);
$form['job_type'] = array(
'#type' => 'checkboxes',
'#multiple' => TRUE,
'#title' => 'Type of Job',
'#options' => $type_options,
'#empty_option' => 'Choose a placement type',
'#empty_value' => 'all',
//'#default_value' => $type_selected,
);
$form['active'] = array(
'#type' => 'checkbox',
'#title' => 'Subscribe/Unsubscribe',
'#default_value' => 1,
);
return $form;
}
I would go for creating all fields in the form than use hook_form_alter() to hide the unneeded ones with ['#access'] = FALSE.
I've been asked to add some Google event tracking to a link on a site I'm 'fixing'.
This relies on the 'onclick' attribute and the ZEND framework (1.11.11) application seems to generate those links as described below.
I can't find out how to add custom attributes to this function, specifically, 'onclick'.
Is this even possible? I've never got along with Zend and any gurus out there will probably know far better than I if it's even possible.
/**
* #return Zend_Navigation_Page_Uri
*/
public function getBrochurePageUri()
{
return new Zend_Navigation_Page_Uri(array(
'label' => 'Brochure request',
'uri' => 'http://www.website.com/brochure/'
)
);
}
try adding the following:
'attribs' => array('onclick'=>'somefunction(params)')
resulting in the following:
return new Zend_Navigation_Page_Uri(array(
'label' => 'Brochure request',
'uri' => 'http://www.website.com/brochure/',
'attribs' => array('onclick'=>'somefunction(params)')
)
);
I usualy use Zend_Validate_Db_RecordExists to update or insert a record. This works fine with one field to check against. How to do it if you have two fields to check?
$validator = new Zend_Validate_Db_RecordExists(
array(
'table' => $this->_name,
'field' => 'id_sector,day_of_week'
)
);
if ($validator->isValid($fields_values['id_sector'],$fields_values['day_of_week'])){
//true
}
I tried it with an array and comma separated list, nothing works... Any help is welcome.
Regards
Andrea
To do this you would have to extend the Zend_Validate_Db_RecordExists class.
It doesn't currently know how to check for the existence of more than one field.
You could just use two different validator instances to check the two fields separately. This is the only work around that I can see right now besides extending it.
If you choose to extend it then you'll have to find some way of passing in all the fields to the constructor ( array seems like a good choice ), and then you'll have to dig into the method that creates the sql query. In this method you'll have to loop over the array of fields that were passed in to the constructor.
You should look into using the exclude parameter. Something like this should do what you want:
$validator = new Zend_Validate_Db_RecordExists(
array(
'table' => $this->_name,
'field' => 'id_sector',
'exclude' => array(
'field' => 'day_of_week',
'value' => $fields_values['day_of_week']
)
);
The exclude field will effectively add to the automatically generated WHERE part to create something equivalent to this:
WHERE `id_sector` = $fields_values['id_sector'] AND `day_of_week` = $fields_values['day_of_week']
Its kind of a hack in that we're using it for the opposite of what it was intended, but its working for me similar to this (I'm using it with Db_NoRecordExists).
Source: Zend_Validate_Db_NoRecordExists example
Sorry for the late reply.
The best option that worked for me is this:
// create an instance of the Zend_Validate_Db_RecordExists class
// pass in the database table name and the first field (as usual)...
$validator = new Zend_Validate_Db_RecordExists(array(
'table' => 'tablename',
'field' => 'first_field'
));
// reset the where clause used by Zend_Validate_Db_RecordExists
$validator->getSelect()->reset('where');
// set again the first field and the second field.
// :value is a named parameter that will be substituted
// by the value passed to the isValid method
$validator->getSelect()->where('first_field = ?', $first_field);
$validator->getSelect()->where('second_field = :value', $second_field);
// add your new record exist based on 2 fields validator to your element.
$element = new Zend_Form_Element_Text('element');
$element->addValidator($validator);
// add the validated element to the form.
$form->addElement($element);
I hope that will help someone :)
Although, I would strongly recommend a neater solution which would be to extend the Zend_Validate_Db_RecordExists class with the above code.
Enjoy!!
Rosario
$dbAdapter = Zend_Db_Table::getDefaultAdapter();
'validators' => array('EmailAddress', $obj= new Zend_Validate_Db_NoRecordExists(array('adapter'=>$dbAdapter,
'field'=>'email',
'table'=>'user',
'exclude'=>array('field'=>'email','value'=>$this->_options['email'], 'field'=>'is_deleted', 'value'=>'1')
))),
For those using Zend 2, If you want to check if user with given id and email exists in table users, It is possible this way.
First, you create the select object that will be use as parameter for the Zend\Validator\Db\RecordExists object
$select = new Zend\Db\Sql\Select();
$select->from('users')
->where->equalTo('id', $user_id)
->where->equalTo('email', $email);
Now, create RecordExists object and check the existence this way
$validator = new Zend\Validator\Db\RecordExists($select);
$validator->setAdapter($dbAdapter);
if ($validator->isValid($username)) {
echo 'This user is valid';
} else {
//get and display errors
$messages = $validator->getMessages();
foreach ($messages as $message) {
echo "$message\n";
}
}
This sample is from ZF2 official doc
You can use the 'exclude' in this parameter pass the second clause that you want to filter through.
$clause = 'table.field2 = value';
$validator = new Zend_Validate_Db_RecordExists(
array(
'table' => 'table',
'field' => 'field1',
'exclude' => $clause
)
);
if ($validator->isValid('value') {
true;
}
I am using zend framework v.3 and validation via InputFilter(), it uses same validation rules as zend framework 2.
In my case I need to check, if location exists in db (by 'id' field) and has needed company's id ('company_id' field).
I implemented it in next way:
$clause = new Operator('company_id', Operator::OP_EQ, $companyId);
$inputFilter->add([
'name' => 'location_id',
'required' => false,
'filters' => [
['name' => 'StringTrim'],
['name' => 'ToInt'],
],
'validators' => [
[
'name' => 'Int',
],
[
'name' => 'dbRecordExists',
'options' => [
'adapter' => $dbAdapterCore,
'table' => 'locations',
'field' => 'id',
'exclude' => $clause,
'messages' => [
'noRecordFound' => "Location does not exist.",
],
]
],
],
]);
In this case validation will pass, only if 'locations' table has item with columns id == $value and company_id == $companyId, like next:
select * from location where id = ? AND company_id = ?
I have a form in a Zend-based site which has a required "Terms and Conditions" checkbox.
I have set a custom message which says "you must agree with terms and conditions".
however, because the checkbox is "presence='required'", it returns
Field 'terms' is required by rule 'terms', but the field is missing
which is this constant defined in the Zend framework:
self::MISSING_MESSAGE => "Field '%field%' is required by rule '%rule%', but the field is missing",
I could edit this constant, but this would change the error reporting for all required checkboxes.
How can I affect the error reporting for this specific case?
If you are using the Zend_Form_Element_Checkbox you can customize the error messages on the Zend_Validate validators.
$form->addElement('checkbox', 'terms', array(
'label'=>'Terms and Services',
'uncheckedValue'=> '',
'checkedValue' => 'I Agree',
'validators' => array(
// array($validator, $breakOnChainFailure, $options)
array('notEmpty', true, array(
'messages' => array(
'isEmpty'=>'You must agree to the terms'
)
))
),
'required'=>true,
);
You want to make sure the unchecked value is "blank" and that the field is "required"
You can override the default message like this:
$options = array(
'missingMessage' => "Field '%field%' is required by rule '%rule%', dawg!"
);
And then:
$input = new Zend_Filter_Input($filters, $validators, $myData);
Or
$input = new Zend_Filter_Input($filters, $validators, $myData);
$input->setOptions($options);
...and finally:
if ($input->hasInvalid() || $input->hasMissing()) {
$messages = $input->getMessages();
}
It's mentioned on the Zend_Filter_Input manual page.
Following #gnarf answer, for those of you who may set Form Fields in a slightly different way (like me), you could also do the following:
$agree_tc_and_privacy = new Zend_Form_Element_Checkbox('agree_tc_and_privacy');
$agree_tc_and_privacy
->setLabel("My T&Cs Agreement text ...")
->addValidator('NotEmpty', false, array('messages' => 'You must and agree...'))
->setRequired(true)
->setOptions(
array(
'uncheckedValue'=> '', //important as explained by gnarf above
'checkedValue' => '1',
)
);
$this->addElement($agree_tc_and_privacy);