I have a user registration form in the front end (in the Users admin section as well) with three extra fields (apart from default ones): birthday, country, language. their values are stored in usermeta table.
I have this action hook to retireve all meta data for the registered user:
add_action('user_register', 'new_user_func');
// user registration callback function
function new_user_func($userID) {
$newUser = get_user_meta( $userID );
$userMeta = array();
foreach ($newUser as $key => $value) {
$userMeta[$key] = $value[0];
}
//do something with $userMeta...
}
var_dump($userMeta) after submit doesn't give me the extra fields value though.. only defaults (first name, last name etc)
Anyone know what might be the case?
Did you try getting the values with:
$meta = get_the_author_meta($meta_key, $user_id);
Perhaps the meta values you add yourself isn't supported by get_user_meta() .
If this don't work either, perhaps you need to look on how you went about creating the new meta fields. Theres a pretty decent tutorial on how to do it here:
http://justintadlock.com/archives/2009/09/10/adding-and-using-custom-user-profile-fields
Read de Codex entry for user_register action, it says:
Not all user metadata has been stored in the database when this action is triggered.
Related
I want to enter the value of digits_phone meta key to be entered as billing_phone for every woocommerce order.
I came up with something like this but it did not work :
//Automatically add the digits phone number of the user, to woocommerce orders for every order
add_filter('woocommerce_checkout_posted_data', 'dg_manipulate_checkout_posted_data');
function dg_manipulate_checkout_posted_data ($data) {
$data['billing_phone'] =['digits_phone'];
return $data;
}
can anyone please help me to figure this out?
I have never used the plugin myself, take this as a guideline
THIS CODE IS NOT TESTED !
Maybe this question is a better fit for wordpress.stackexchange.com
From the last comment of this post I see that there should be 2 user metadata related to some digits_phone: 'digits_phone' and 'digits_phone_no'
Assuming that the one we want is digits_phone, this code should be a hint in the right direction:
add_filter('woocommerce_checkout_posted_data', 'dg_manipulate_checkout_posted_data');
function dg_manipulate_checkout_posted_data ($data) {
// save current user data in variable $current_user
$current_user = wp_get_current_user();
//get digits phone from db and save in variable $digits_phone
$digits_phone = get_user_meta( $current_user->ID, 'digits_phone' , true );
// assign to POSTed array and return it
$data['billing_phone'] = $digits_phone;
return $data;
}
Also have a look at How can I convert woocommerce checkout fields in capital letters to get a better picture of manipulating POST data
Is there any way to retrieve the clean unhashed password value in the WooCommerce checkout page with any hook?
What I need to do: I need to create a Firebase Auth user when a new WordPress user is creating. If this is not possible, what would be the best practice to achieve this?
What I tried
First I tried to create a new custom field on checkout and retrieve it with:
function wh_CustomReadOrder($order_id)
{
$order = wc_get_order($order_id);
WC()->session = new WC_Session_Handler;
/*
* Next lets create a customer so we can access checkout fields
* If you will check a constructor for WC_Customer class you will see
* that if you will not provide user to create customer it will use some
* default one. Magic.
*/
WC()->customer = new WC_Customer;
/*
* Done. You can browse all chceckout fields (including custom ones)
*/
?>
<script type="text/javascript">
var order = <?php echo $order ?>;
var checkout_fields = <?php echo json_encode(WC()->checkout->checkout_fields) ?>
var email = order;
console.log(checkout_fields);
</script>
<?php
}
add_action('woocommerce_thankyou', 'wh_CustomReadOrder');
I get an array with all fields, but my custom field is not showing. But even if so, the WordPress password will still be different. The best way would be to simply get the WordPress password and then create the user in Firebase.
Do you have any idea?
As you will see in the wc-user-functions.php file, the function wc_create_new_customer is used when creating a new account.
For checking the checkout page you can use Conditional Tags
is_checkout() Returns true on the checkout page.
So to intercept the unhashed password you could use the woocommerce_created_customer hook. The $unhashed_password variable will contain the unhashed password.
function action_woocommerce_created_customer ( $customer_id, $new_customer_data, $password_generated ) {
// Returns true on the checkout page.
if ( is_checkout() ) {
$unhashed_password = $new_customer_data['user_pass'];
}
}
add_action( 'woocommerce_created_customer', 'action_woocommerce_created_customer', 10, 3 );
One approach I would consider is to build a custom webform for creating the customer's account. That way you can manipulate the data however you want.
For example, when the user submits the form, take the data, register the new user in WC/WP, send the data to firebase, then redirect.
The downside is that you'll have to manage the process a 100% and deal with any possible errors.
Another way:
Use the default WC or WP account creation form, but on submit -> prevent Default with Javascript, take the data (yes you can access the password before it's hashed), send it to Firebase, THEN, submit the form and let WC/WP save it in the database in a normal fashion.
I did it like this when I needed to send that data to an Email Management software. The user enters the values, hits submit: my code blocks the submit event, sends the data where I want it to, then submits the form.
Hope it helps!
I have added several custom fields to my checkout that only appear when a user is checking out as a guest for the first time. My checkout process requires that the user create an account to complete checkout.
I have added four fields using the woocommerce_form_field method and then I have tried modifying the code provided in the answer here to achieve what I want. However, I have tried several checkouts, creating new accounts to check if the custom field values save into the new users' profile, but it doesn't seem to be working.
Here is one example of a solution I tried which did not work:
function reigel_woocommerce_checkout_update_user_meta( $customer_id) {
if ( ! empty( $_POST['practitioner_license_number'] ) ) {
$pln = sanitize_text_field( $_POST['practitioner-license-number'] );
update_user_meta($customer_id, 'practitioner_license_number', $pln);
}
}
add_action('woocommerce_created_customer', 'reigel_woocommerce_checkout_update_user_meta', 10, 2);
practitioner-license-number is my custom field added using the woocommerce_form_field method. I modified the code at the link above, so that the function runs on woocommerce_created_customer and then in update_user_meta I'm trying to pass the customer ID so that it saves the meta to the user profile that is created.
Would appreciate help trying to solve this. Most of the questions/answers on this subject assume that the user is logged in and already has an account, which is not the case here.
From the code you share, I think the problem lies in incorrectly passing to the $_POST,
perhaps practitioner_license_number vs practitioner-license-number.
You can use the code below to see if your hook works, if the value is written in the database you know that the problem is indeed elsewhere.
It might help to share the code you used for the custom fields too?
function action_woocommerce_created_customer( $customer_id, $new_customer_data, $password_generated ) {
$pln = 'test';
update_user_meta( $customer_id, 'practitioner_license_number', $pln);
}
add_action( 'woocommerce_created_customer', 'action_woocommerce_created_customer', 10, 3 );
I'm using the following code to hook a product update in woocommerce:
add_action('woocommerce_update_product', 'on_update_product', 10, 2);
function on_update_product($product_id, $product){
// code here
}
Is there a way to check if certain fields have changed, compared to the previously stored version of the product?
Thanks!
The best way to do this that I know is with hashes.
add_action('woocommerce_update_product', 'on_update_product', 10, 2);
function on_update_product($product_id, $product){
//create a hash from data you want to track
$hash = md5(json_encode([
$product->get_name(),
$product->get_price(),
"etc....."
]));
//get the hash before the product update
$hashBefore = get_post_meta( $product_id, "hashKey", true );
//check if de hash is diffrend
if ($hash !== $hashBefore) {
// Store the new hash
add_post_meta($product_id, "hashKey", $hash);
// exicute your code
// .....
}
// you can duplicate this process if you want to track individual fields
$hash2 = md5(json_encode([
$product->get_sku(),
]));
$hashBefore2 = get_post_meta( $product_id, "hashKey2", true );
if ($hash2 !== $hashBefore2) {
add_post_meta($product_id, "hashKey2", $hash2);
}
}
To get data out of the product object check this resource:
https://businessbloomer.com/woocommerce-easily-get-product-info-title-sku-desc-product-object/
I hope this suits your situation
I would recommend hooking to another action. I use it to identify changes in orders, but it actually can use for any woocomercce related object types (orders, products, coupons, subscriptions etc.)
woocommerce_before_[objectName]_object_save
for your purpose you can use:
add_action('woocommerce_before_product_object_save', 'identify_product_change', 100, 2);
function identify_product_change($product, $data){
$posted_info = $_POST; // Use this to get the new information
$price = $product->get_price(); //Example of getting the "old" product information
}
Having that said, you need to be careful, since this hook may be initiated from different triggers (some background processes etc). You may want to have some caution measurements:
use $_POST['action'] == 'editpost' to make sure the action is an
actual "Update" click from the admin edit page.
use (is_admin()) to limit it only to admin area
you can use (!defined('DOING_CRON')) to make sure it won't run on any cron execution
and you can use (!defined('DOING_AJAX')) to make sure it won't run on ajax calls
this way you can limit it only to the exact action you wish to catch.
I'm using Formidable forms in Wordpress and have a form that registers users. I can use a radio button in the registration form to determine what their role will be. I have a hook for that. What I need, however, is a hook that will change the user role based on radio selection on form entry UPDATE. My current code only works on entry creation. Here is the code that assigns roles on registration:
add_filter('frmreg_new_role', 'frmreg_new_role', 10, 2);
function frmreg_new_role($role, $atts){
extract($atts);
if($form->id == 8){
if($_POST['item_meta'][280] == 'Job Applicant')
$role = 'applicant';
}
return $role;
}
"8" is the id of the form itself. "280" is the id of the radio button field where "Job Applicant" is one of the values. And "applicant" is one of our site's user roles.
I need an adaptation of this that will change the role after the entry has already been created, on update. The closest thing I can find is a hook that changes user role after a successful PayPal payment. I tried to combine the two but I couldn't get it to work. Here is the PayPal generated user role changer:
add_action('frm_payment_paypal_ipn', 'change_paid_user_role');
function change_paid_user_role($args){
$new_role = 'contributor'; //change this to the role paid users should have
if(!$args['pay_vars']['completed'])
return; //don't continue if the payment was not completed
if(!$args['entry']->user_id or !is_numeric($args['entry']->user_id))
return; //don't continue if not linked to a user
$user = get_userdata($args['entry']->user_id);
if(!$user)
return; //don't continue if user doesn't exist
$updated_user = (array)$user;
// Get the highest/primary role for this user
$user_roles = $user->roles;
$user_role = array_shift($user_roles);
if ( $user_role == 'administrator' )
return; //make sure we don't downgrade any admins
$updated_user['role'] = $new_role;
wp_update_user($updated_user);
}
UPDATE: the action hook should probably be: frm_after_create_entry according to Formidable forums.
Many times, researching the core files is more productive than any Google or Manual. Dropping the whole plugin directory in a code editor and researching for the string frm_after_create_entry takes us to the create() method where this hook happens.
After that, there's the update() method and it provides the action hook: frm_after_update_entry.
This hook passes two parameters: $id and $new_values['form_id']. I cannot reproduce your setup, so testing the hook is up to you.
Reference: Actions and filters are NOT the same thing…
In this example:
add_action( 'frm_after_update_entry', 'change_role_to_staff', 10, 2);
function change_role_to_staff( $form_id, $values ){
var_dump($values);
die();
}
As this is an action hook, nothing has to be returned.
There's no $roles or $atts, the parameters are the form ID and Values.
What you're looking for is inside $values.
var_dump() and die() are for debugging purposes and must be removed at once after testing.
Do your wp_update_user with this values and adapting your previous code.