Two Place Order Button in woocommerce Checkout page - wordpress

I am having Issue in my checkout page. I am getting Two Place order button(click here). I tried to fix it in form-checkout.php even I checked in form-pay.php, in wp-content/themes/mytheme/woocommerce/checkout.
I checked in wordpress forum I got solution to remove two checkout button from cart page, there is no solution for my problem
if ( ! defined( 'ABSPATH' ) ) exit; // Exit if accessed directly
global $woocommerce;
wc_print_notices();
do_action( 'woocommerce_before_checkout_form', $checkout );
// filter hook for include new pages inside the payment method
$get_checkout_url = apply_filters( 'woocommerce_get_checkout_url', WC()->cart->get_checkout_url() ); ?>
<form name="checkout" method="post" class="checkout" action="<?php echo esc_url( $get_checkout_url ); ?>">
<?php if ( sizeof( $checkout->checkout_fields ) > 0 ) : ?>
<?php do_action( 'woocommerce_checkout_before_customer_details' ); ?>
<div class="row" id="customer_details">
<div class="col-md-6">
<?php do_action( 'woocommerce_checkout_billing' ); ?>
</div>
<div class="col-md-6">
<?php do_action( 'woocommerce_checkout_shipping' ); ?>
</div>
</div>
<?php do_action( 'woocommerce_checkout_after_customer_details' ); ?>
<h3 id="order_review_heading"><?php _e( 'Your order', 'woocommerce' ); ?></h3>
<?php endif; ?>
<?php do_action( 'woocommerce_checkout_order_review' ); ?>
</form>
<?php do_action( 'woocommerce_after_checkout_form' ); ?>

Go to wp-content/themes/mytheme/woocommerce/checkout/view-order.php. In View-order.php remove id="payment" completle
This issue is because of theme version

Please check your configuration in your WordPress admin.
Woocommers->settings on the Payment Tab check your information details if you have miss an HTML tags.
I have experience on this when I customized or add some html tags on the details text area with closing "div" tag.

Related

Remove Page Header from Blog Posts

I have a page-header that is getting copied over to all of my blog posts that I want to remove completely. I am removing it visually via CSS, but SEO crawlers are still picking it up via the tag.
I am using a standard wordpress them augmented with Elementor. Here is a screenshot of the SEO report.
And here is a screenshot of the actual HTML code
Let me know if any of you have any additional questions! Thank you for your help!
You can make a conditional statement that just outputs the title of the post if on single blog posts, so something like this
<div class="container clr page-header-inner">
<?php
// Return if page header is disabled
if ( oceanwp_has_page_header_heading() ) { ?>
<!-- check to see if single blog posts -->
<?php if (is_single()) : ?>
<h1><?php echo get_the_title(); ?></h1>
<!-- otherwise show the existing title format -->
<?php else: ?>
<<?php echo esc_attr( $heading ); ?> class="page-header-title clr"<?php oceanwp_schema_markup( 'headline' ); ?>><?php echo wp_kses_post( oceanwp_title() ); ?></<?php echo esc_attr( $heading ); ?>>
<?php endif; ?>
<?php get_template_part( 'partials/page-header-subheading' ); ?>
<?php } ?>
<?php if ( function_exists( 'oceanwp_breadcrumb_trail' ) ) {
oceanwp_breadcrumb_trail();
} ?>
</div><!-- .page-header-inner -->
you would have to replace the existing code

Move shipping section to the right side of woocommerce checkout page [closed]

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I've been struggling to change the layout of my woocommerce checkout page. I'd like to move the Shipping details to the right, so it's side-by-side with the billing. I was able to move the order details section to the right side via CSS but I also want the shipping to move there, just above the order summary and I can't seem to do it in CSS.
You have to override the WooCommerce checkout form.
How to override:
Copy the checkout form from the path plugins/woocommerce/templates/checkout/form-checkout.php and paste in your activated theme (for e.g. here I'm pasting it inside my customized child theme of WordPress official theme twentytwenty) in the following path themes/twentytwenty-child/woocommerce/checkout/form-checkout.php
Override the content like this:
<?php
/**
* Checkout Form
*
* This template can be overridden by copying it to yourtheme/woocommerce/checkout/form-checkout.php.
*
* HOWEVER, on occasion WooCommerce will need to update template files and you
* (the theme developer) will need to copy the new files to your theme to
* maintain compatibility. We try to do this as little as possible, but it does
* happen. When this occurs the version of the template file will be bumped and
* the readme will list any important changes.
*
* #see https://docs.woocommerce.com/document/template-structure/
* #package WooCommerce/Templates
* #version 3.5.0
*/
if ( ! defined( 'ABSPATH' ) ) {
exit;
}
do_action( 'woocommerce_before_checkout_form', $checkout );
// If checkout registration is disabled and not logged in, the user cannot checkout.
if ( ! $checkout->is_registration_enabled() && $checkout->is_registration_required() && ! is_user_logged_in() ) {
echo esc_html( apply_filters( 'woocommerce_checkout_must_be_logged_in_message', __( 'You must be logged in to checkout.', 'woocommerce' ) ) );
return;
}
?>
<form name="checkout" method="post" class="checkout woocommerce-checkout" action="<?php echo esc_url( wc_get_checkout_url() ); ?>" enctype="multipart/form-data">
<?php if ( $checkout->get_checkout_fields() ) : ?>
<?php do_action( 'woocommerce_checkout_before_customer_details' ); ?>
<div class="col2-set" id="customer_details">
<div class="col-1">
<?php do_action( 'woocommerce_checkout_billing' ); ?>
</div>
</div>
<?php do_action( 'woocommerce_checkout_after_customer_details' ); ?>
<?php endif; ?>
<?php do_action( 'woocommerce_checkout_before_order_review_heading' ); ?>
<div class="col2-set">
<div class="col-1">
<h3 id="cus-shipping-heading">Shipping Details</h3>
<?php do_action( 'woocommerce_checkout_shipping' ); ?>
</div>
</div>
<h3 id="order_review_heading"><?php esc_html_e( 'Your order', 'woocommerce' ); ?></h3>
<?php do_action( 'woocommerce_checkout_before_order_review' ); ?>
<div id="order_review" class="woocommerce-checkout-review-order">
<?php do_action( 'woocommerce_checkout_order_review' ); ?>
</div>
<?php do_action( 'woocommerce_checkout_after_order_review' ); ?>
</form>
<?php do_action( 'woocommerce_after_checkout_form', $checkout ); ?>
Explaination of the changes:
Removed the shipping section from the div#customer_details
Add that section next to the action hook <?php do_action( 'woocommerce_checkout_before_order_review_heading' ); ?>
Here is the snippet of the section we added:
<div class="col2-set">
<div class="col-1">
<h3 id="cus-shipping-heading">Shipping Details</h3>
<?php do_action( 'woocommerce_checkout_shipping' ); ?>
</div>
</div>
After the change the checkout page will look like this:

making responsive three columns woocommerce

Is there a way to create columns for woocommerce, I want it to be 3 columns, column 1(step1) the billing information, column 2(step2) shipping method and payment method, column 3(step3) item details and checkout button, all in one checkout page, or is there a plugin for this?
<?php
/**
* Checkout Form
*
* #author WooThemes
* #package WooCommerce/Templates
* #version 2.3.0
*/
if ( ! defined( 'ABSPATH' ) ) {
exit;
}
wc_print_notices();
do_action( 'woocommerce_before_checkout_form', $checkout );
// If checkout registration is disabled and not logged in, the user cannot checkout
if ( ! $checkout->enable_signup && ! $checkout->enable_guest_checkout && ! is_user_logged_in() ) {
echo apply_filters( 'woocommerce_checkout_must_be_logged_in_message', __( 'You must be logged in to checkout.', 'woocommerce' ) );
return;
}
// filter hook for include new pages inside the payment method
$get_checkout_url = apply_filters( 'woocommerce_get_checkout_url', WC()- >cart->get_checkout_url() ); ?>
<form name="checkout" method="post" class="checkout woocommerce-checkout" action="<?php echo esc_url( $get_checkout_url ); ?>" enctype="multipart/form-data">
<?php if ( sizeof( $checkout->checkout_fields ) > 0 ) : ?>
<?php do_action( 'woocommerce_checkout_before_customer_details' ); ?>
<div class="onecheckout">
<div class="step-1">Step One</div>
<?php do_action( 'woocommerce_checkout_billing' ); ?>
</div>
<div class="onecheckoutmid">
<div class="step-2">Step Two</div>
<h6>Delivery Method</h6>
<div class="col-2">
<?php do_action( 'woocommerce_checkout_shipping' ); ?>
</div>
</div>
<div class="onecheckout">
<div class="step-3">Step Three</div>
<h6>Confirm Order</h6>
</form>
WooCommerce provides the ability to override their checkout template files by adding a woocommerce directory into your WordPress theme and making any adjustments you need there.
It would require overriding several template files, but with some custom HTML and CSS, you could probably achieve the results you are looking for.

How to hide featured image in Wordpress Single Post

I want to hide the featured image in the post page, but not on the home page.
I had a look at the other posts about this same problem, but they didn't work for me, so I will appreciate your help.
Here is my single.php
<div id="primary" class="full-width-page">
<main id="main" class="site-main" role="main">
<?php while ( have_posts() ) : the_post(); ?>
<?php get_template_part( 'content', 'single' ); ?>
<?php tesseract_post_nav(); ?>
<?php
// If comments are open or we have at least one comment, load up the comment template
if ( comments_open() || get_comments_number() ) :
comments_template();
endif;
?>
<?php endwhile; // end of the loop. ?>
</main><!-- #main -->
</div><!-- #primary -->
Add this to your functions.php (prefer child-theme), and that is it. It works on any theme, and you don't need to touch the ugly HTML templates.
function wordpress_hide_feature_image( $html, $post_id, $post_image_id ) {
return is_single() ? '' : $html;
}
// add the filter
add_filter( 'post_thumbnail_html', 'wordpress_hide_feature_image', 10, 3);
References:
https://helloacm.com/how-to-hide-feature-image-of-posts-in-wordpress/
Please, write what theme you are using.
According to what you wrote you have to edit content-single.php.
Search for the line like this:
get_the_post_thumbnail( $post->ID, ... );
or
the_post_thumbnail();
And remove or comment it.
The code is in the template part. You will find the feature image function in the file named 'content-single'.
There are two ways to disable:
1. Find the code.
Remove or comment the function in your content-single template file:
<div class="thumbnail">
<?php
// Comment out this function:
echo get_the_post_thumbnail( $post_id, $size, $attr );
// or:
the_post_thumbnail();
// Or you can remove this <div> entirely
?>
</div>
2. CSS method.
Find the appropriate class of the image div and add a display none condition in your style sheet.
.thumbnail{display:none}
If you can share the site url I can answer more clearly.
How to remove featured image background from Tesseract Theme single posts:
1.- First of all make a copy from the original content-single.php file.
2.- Edit content-single.php with a plain text editor.
3.- If the original file is like this:
<?php
/**
* #package Tesseract
*/
?>
<article id="post-<?php the_ID(); ?>" <?php post_class(); ?>>
<?php if ( has_post_thumbnail() && 'post' == get_post_type() ) {
$thumbnail = wp_get_attachment_image_src( get_post_thumbnail_id( $post->ID ), 'tesseract-large' ); ?>
<div class="entry-background" style="background-image: url(<?php echo esc_url( $thumbnail[0] ); ?>)">
<header class="entry-header">
<?php the_title( '<h1 class="entry-title">', '</h1>' ); ?>
</header><!-- .entry-header -->
</div><!-- .entry-background -->
<?php } else { ?>
<header class="entry-header">
<?php the_title( '<h1 class="entry-title">', '</h1>' ); ?>
</header><!-- .entry-header -->
<?php } ?>
<div class="entry-content">
<div class="entry-meta">
<?php tesseract_posted_on(); ?>
</div><!-- .entry-meta -->
<?php the_content(); ?>
<?php
wp_link_pages( array(
'before' => '<div class="page-links">' . __( 'Pages:', 'tesseract' ),
'after' => '</div>',
) );
?>
</div><!-- .entry-content -->
</article><!-- #post-## -->
( Source: github.com/Conutant/TESSERACT/blob/Master_Branch/content-single.php )
4.- To remove the featured image background, change it to this:
<?php
/**
* #package Tesseract
*/
?>
<article id="post-<?php the_ID(); ?>" <?php post_class(); ?>>
<header class="entry-header">
<?php the_title( '<h1 class="entry-title">', '</h1>' ); ?>
</header><!-- .entry-header -->
<div class="entry-content">
<div class="entry-meta">
<?php tesseract_posted_on(); ?>
</div><!-- .entry-meta -->
<?php the_content(); ?>
<?php
wp_link_pages( array(
'before' => '<div class="page-links">' . __( 'Pages:', 'tesseract' ),
'after' => '</div>',
) );
?>
</div><!-- .entry-content -->
</article><!-- #post-## -->
5.- Remember that all changes will be overwritten when you update the theme to a new version. A good option to avoid this is to create a Child Theme, the recommended way of modifying an existing theme. More information can be found at: https://codex.wordpress.org/Child_Themes
6.- Test it and let me know if you have any problem.
Regards.
In your code there is one line
<?php get_template_part( 'content', 'single' ); ?>
which means it calls content.php file of your current theme. go to that file and comment following code
<?php if ( has_post_thumbnail() && ! post_password_required() && ! is_attachment() ) : ?> <div class="entry-thumbnail"> <?php the_post_thumbnail(); ?> </div> <?php endif; ?>
But note that it removes thumbnail everywhere when content.php file calls, so better idea is create custom single.php file. For that you need to copy in single.php file and rename with your post name.
for example if you use post for add your content then rename with single-post.php or if you use custom post type like news then rename with single-news.php.
After that open this file and remove this code
<?php get_template_part( 'content', 'single' ); ?>
from file and goto the content.php file and copy your require code which you want to display and paste in your new file.

Wordpress: show comment on a new page?

I need to display link after each comment, when you click that link, a new page displays that single coment on a new page.
Is that possible?
I answered your exact question over on WordPress Answers (also a StackExchange site) just yesterday. You can find that answer here. It involved the following four steps:
Setting up the URL Rewriting by adding a query_var, rewrite_tag and a permastruct,
Being sure to flush the rewrite rules in a plugin's activation hook or manually,
Adding a parse_query filter hook to set the query_vars's post to be the comment's post and to disable sticky posts for the query,
Adding a template_include filter hook to filter the template file name to load a template specific template file for a single comment, and lastly
To create the comment template file as /wp-content/themes/%your-theme%/comment.php.
Again, you can find the answer over here.
Hope this helps.
-Mike
UPDATE:
Below is the full content that I had also posted on WordPress Answers:
There are numerous different ways to accomplish this, some more polished than others and practically all of them with potential for conflict with other plugins, but ignoring all that here's one way that is pretty close to what you asked for. :)
This solution will support a URL format like the following where %comment_id% is the numeric ID of your comment from the wp_comments table:
http://example.com/comments/%comment_id%/
First you'll need to configure your URL rewriting using the following code. Hopefully it is reasonably self-explanitory but don't hesitate to ask:
$wp->add_query_var('comment_id'); // Add the "behind-the-scenes" query variable that WordPress will use
$wp_rewrite->add_rewrite_tag('%comment_id%', '([0-9]+)','comment_id='); // Define a rewrite tag to match that assigns to the query var
$wp_rewrite->add_permastruct('comment-page', 'comments/%comment_id%'); // Define a URL pattern to match the rewrite tag.
You'll also either need to call this code in a plugin activation hook to flush the rules, or if it's your site you can just save permalinks in the admin console's Settings > Permalinks settings area:
global $wp_rewrite;
$wp_rewrite->flush_rules(false);
Next add a parse_query filter hook. This will be called after WordPress has inspected the query. It tests to see if your added comment_id query_var set and if so it tests to see if you are on the desired URL. If yes then it loads the comment array using get_comment() in order to set the 'p' parameter (which should be set to a post ID) to the post that is related to the comment. That way when WordPress runs the query that it is going to run no matter what at least it loads something you'll need in your comment.php theme template file below and you won't have to ran another query later when you need it. This code also tells WordPress to ignore sticky posts using the oddly named caller_get_posts option:
add_filter( 'parse_query', 'my_parse_query' );
function my_parse_query( $query ) {
global $wp;
if (isset($query->query['comment_id']) && substr($wp->request,0,9)=='comments/') {
$comment = get_comment($query->query['comment_id']);
$query->query_vars['p'] = $comment->comment_post_ID; // Causes the comment's post to be loaded by the query.
$query->query_vars['caller_get_posts'] = true; // Keeps sticky posts from invading into the top of our query.
}
}
Still next you'll need to hook the code in /wp-includes/template-loader.php using the template_include filter. This will be called after WordPress has both inspected the query and loaded the post for the comment. Here you'll first check again for comment_id in the query_var and also for the URL being the one you want. If so we replace the /index.php template page with /comment.php which is a theme template file you will need to create:
add_filter( 'template_include', 'my_template_include' );
function my_template_include( $template ) {
global $wp,$wp_query;
if (isset($wp_query->query['comment_id']) && substr($wp->request,0,9)=='comments/') {
$template = str_replace('/index.php','/comment.php',$template);
}
return $template;
}
Lastly now you need to create your theme template file which I've chosen to call /comment.php. Since it's your theme you'll want to make it look like you want but here is an example to get you started:
<?php
/*
* File: /wp-content/themes/my-theme/comment.php
*/
global $wp_query,$post;
$comment_id = $wp_query->query['comment_id'];
$comment = get_comment($comment_id);
$permalink = get_permalink($post->ID);
get_header();
?>
<div id="container">
<div id="comment-<?php echo $comment_id; ?>" class="comment">
<p>Comment by: <span class="comment-author">
<?php echo $comment->comment_author; ?></span>
on <span class="comment-date"><?php echo date("D M jS Y", strtotime($comment->comment_date)); ?></span>
at <span class="comment-time"><?php echo date("h:ia", strtotime($comment->comment_date)); ?></span>
</p>
<p>About: <?php echo $post->post_title; ?></p>
<blockquote><?php echo $comment->comment_content; ?></blockquote>
</div>
</div>
<?php
get_sidebar();
get_footer();
Any questions? Just ask.
Hope this helps.
P.S. All of the code I describing above can either go in your theme's functions.php file and/or in a plugin of your own. A caveat is for the URL rewrite flushing rules that should go in a plugin activation hook if you are going to include it instead us just flushing them manually in the permalinks section of the admin console. I didn't show how to register an activation hook do but if you want to learn more you can read about it here.
(New edited version after OP's comments)
There are many ways to do this. In theory this is the simplest, but maybe not 'most appropriate according to WordPress' way. Take this as a starting point. I haven't tested it, so you may encounter an error or two that should be solvable with some minor tweaks. Let me know if you get stumped and I'll do my best. So conceptually...
You should copy the page.php template file and rename it to 'comments_page.php' (or whatever you like). Open this file in your code editor and find where the following appears: (or create it if it does not exist)
/*Template Name: page*/
and change it to
/*Template Name: comments_page*/
Now open your WordPress admin area and create a new page. Call it whatever you want but don't add any content. In the right hand column, select the template that the page uses from the "Page Template" drop down menu. Select 'comments_page' (or whatever you listed as the template name). This tells WordPress to use your file to show this specific page instead of the default page template. Save the page and note the page_id that WordPress generates.
Now, find your theme's comments template, usually 'comments.php'. Find the function wp_list_comments();. We are going to add the name of a custom function that will control the display of your comments as an argument to this function. For an example, go to the twenty-ten theme's files, open comments.php and you'll see what that looks like:
wp_list_comments( array( 'callback' => 'twentyten_comment' ) );
Open the twenty-ten theme's functions.php and find
function twentyten_comment()
Copy that entire function and paste it into your theme's functions file. Change the name to' my_comment()', and add that to the wp_list_comments function call like this:
wp_list_comments( array('callback'=>'my_comment'));
In your newly-created 'my_comment()' function in your functions.php file, add a link where you want to the separate page of comments (comments_page.php) using get_page_link() and a query var named 'commentID' and the comments ID.
View this comment
Now to inappropriately add php logic to a template file. Once you understand how this works, you can create a function in your functions.php file and then call it in the theme file...
On comments_page.php ,use $_GET['commentID'] to retrieve the comment's id value from the url, and pass it to get_comment($commentID) to retrieve the single comment and display it on a single page.
if(isset($_GET['commentID'])){$commentID = $_GET['commentID'];}
$comment = get_comment($commentID);
Now you have all the single comments information in the $comment variable as an object.
You can decide how to display the comment, but to start, I recommend copying the contents of your theme's comments template to keep things consistent. It will show exactly the same thing the post page shows, but it sounds like this page is intended more for the permalink to a single comment that you link to from somewhere else.
Hope this helps. Let me know if you run into a snag.
Note: this answer provides info given to me from Todd Perkins over at wordpress.stackexchange.com
This is my functions.php
<?php
if ( ! function_exists( 'twentyten_comment' ) ) :
function my_comment( $comment, $args, $depth ) {
$GLOBALS['comment'] = $comment;
switch ( $comment->comment_type ) :
case '' :
?>
<li <?php comment_class(); ?> id="li-comment-<?php comment_ID(); ?>">
<div id="comment-<?php comment_ID(); ?>">
<div class="comment-author vcard">
<?php echo get_avatar( $comment, 40 ); ?>
<?php printf( __( '%s <span class="says">says:</span>', 'twentyten' ), sprintf( '<cite class="fn">%s</cite>', get_comment_author_link() ) ); ?>
</div><!-- .comment-author .vcard -->
<?php if ( $comment->comment_approved == '0' ) : ?>
<em><?php _e( 'Your comment is awaiting moderation.', 'twentyten' ); ?></em>
<br />
<?php endif; ?>
<div class="comment-meta commentmetadata"><a href="<?php echo esc_url( get_comment_link( $comment->comment_ID ) ); ?>">
<?php
/* translators: 1: date, 2: time */
printf( __( '%1$s at %2$s', 'twentyten' ), get_comment_date(), get_comment_time() ); ?></a><?php edit_comment_link( __( '(Edit)', 'twentyten' ), ' ' );
?>
</div><!-- .comment-meta .commentmetadata -->
<div class="comment-body"><?php comment_text(); ?></div>
View this comment
<div class="reply">
<?php comment_reply_link( array_merge( $args, array( 'depth' => $depth, 'max_depth' => $args['max_depth'] ) ) ); ?>
</div><!-- .reply -->
</div><!-- #comment-## -->
<?php
break;
case 'pingback' :
case 'trackback' :
?>
<li class="post pingback">
<p><?php _e( 'Pingback:', 'twentyten' ); ?> <?php comment_author_link(); ?><?php edit_comment_link( __('(Edit)', 'twentyten'), ' ' ); ?></p>
<?php
break;
endswitch;
}
endif;
This is my comments_page.php
/*Template Name: comments_page*/
<? if(isset($_GET['commentID'])){$commentID = $_GET['commentID'];}
$comment = get_comment($commentID);
?>
<?php get_header(); ?>
<div id="content">
<?php if (have_posts()) : ?>
<?php while (have_posts()) : the_post(); ?>
<div class="post">
<!--uncomment for header tags-- <h1><?php the_title(); ?></h1>
<small><b>Posted:</b> <?php the_time('F jS, Y') ?> | <b>Author:</b> <?php the_author_posts_link(); ?> | <b>Filed under:</b> <?php the_category(', ') ?> <?php the_tags(' | <b>Tags:</b> ', ', ', ''); ?> <?php if ( $user_ID ) :
?> | <b>Modify:</b> <?php edit_post_link(); ?> <?php endif; ?>| <?php comments_popup_link('No Comments »', '1 Comment »', '% Comments »'); ?></small> -->
<?php the_content('Read the rest of this entry »'); ?>
<hr/>
</div>
<?php endwhile; ?>
<div class="navigation">
<div class="alignleft"><?php next_posts_link('« Older Entries') ?></div>
<div class="alignright"><?php previous_posts_link('Newer Entries »') ?></div>
</div>
<?php else : ?>
<h2 class="center">Not Found</h2>
<p class="center">Sorry, but you are looking for something that isn't here.</p>
<?php endif; ?>
</div>
<?php get_sidebar(); ?>
<?php get_footer(); ?>
This is my comments.php
<?php // Do not delete these lines
if (!empty($_SERVER['SCRIPT_FILENAME']) && 'comments.php' == basename($_SERVER['SCRIPT_FILENAME']))
die ('Please do not load this page directly. Thanks!');
if (!empty($post->post_password)) { // if there's a password
if ($_COOKIE['wp-postpass_' . COOKIEHASH] != $post->post_password) { // and it doesn't match the cookie
?>
<p class="nocomments">This post is password protected. Enter the password to view comments.</p>
<?php
return;
}
}
/* This variable is for alternating comment background */
$oddcomment = 'class="alt" ';
?>
<!-- You can start editing here. -->
<div id="comments">
<?php if ($comments) : ?>
<h3><?php comments_number('No Comments', 'One Comment', '% Comments' );?> on “<?php the_title(); ?>”</h3>
<?php wp_list_comments( array('callback'=>'my_comment')); ?>
<?php else : // this is displayed if there are no comments so far ?>
<?php if ('open' == $post->comment_status) : ?>
<!-- If comments are open, but there are no comments. -->
<?php else : // comments are closed ?>
<!-- If comments are closed. -->
<p class="nocomments">Comments are closed.</p>
<?php endif; ?>
<?php endif; ?>
<?php if ('open' == $post->comment_status) : ?>
<hr/>
<h4 class="center">Leave a Reply</h4>
<?php if ( get_option('comment_registration') && !$user_ID ) : ?>
<p>You must be logged in to post a comment.</p>
<?php else : ?>
<form action="<?php echo get_option('siteurl'); ?>/wp-comments-post.php" method="post" id="commentform">
<ul class="formlist">
<?php if ( $user_ID ) : ?>
<p>Logged in as <?php echo $user_identity; ?>. Log out »</p>
<?php else : ?>
<li><input type="text" name="author" id="author" value="Name <?php if ($req) echo "(required)"; ?>" size="22" tabindex="1" <?php if ($req) echo "aria-required='true'"; ?> onblur="if(this.value.length == 0) this.value='Name <?php if ($req) echo "(required)"; ?>';" onclick="if(this.value == 'Name <?php if ($req) echo "(required)"; ?>') this.value='';" /></li>
<li><input type="text" name="email" id="email" value="Mail (will not be published) <?php if ($req) echo "(required)"; ?>" size="22" tabindex="2" <?php if ($req) echo "aria-required='true'"; ?> onblur="if(this.value.length == 0) this.value='Mail (will not be published) <?php if ($req) echo "(required)"; ?>';" onclick="if(this.value == 'Mail (will not be published) <?php if ($req) echo "(required)"; ?>') this.value='';" /></li>
<li><input type="text" name="url" id="url" value="Website" size="22" tabindex="3" onblur="if(this.value.length == 0) this.value='Website';" onclick="if(this.value == 'Website') this.value='';" /></li>
<?php endif; ?>
<!--<p><small><strong>XHTML:</strong> You can use these tags: <code><?php echo allowed_tags(); ?></code></small></p>-->
<li><textarea name="comment" id="comment" cols="70%" rows="10" tabindex="4" value="Enter comment here."></textarea></li>
<li class="submitbutton"><input name="submit" type="submit" id="submit" tabindex="5" value="Submit Comment" /></li>
<input type="hidden" name="comment_post_ID" value="<?php echo $id; ?>" />
<?php do_action('comment_form', $post->ID); ?>
</ul>
</form>
<?php endif; // If registration required and not logged in ?>
<?php endif; // if you delete this the sky will fall on your head ?>
</div>

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