Retrieve Current Drupal Theme? - drupal

Within the context of a module, how can you determine what theme is loaded for the current user?
drupal_get_path
path_to_theme
Neither of these are any good because they seem to only work in the template.php of a theme.

If users are allowed to select a theme for themselves, the theme they selected is saved in $user->theme, where $user is the user object.
The global variable $custom_theme contains the name of the theme currently set, if a module has set a custom theme.
The following snippet saves in $current_theme the name of the theme currently active:
global $custom_theme, $theme, $user;
if (!empty($user->theme)) {
$current_theme = $user->theme;
}
elseif (!empty($custom_theme)) {
$current_theme = $custom_theme;
}
else {
$current_theme = $theme ? $theme : variable_get('theme_default', 'garland');
}

path_to_theme should work just fine, I tested it on two Drupal installs, and both worked. If the theme has not been initialized yet, path_to_theme will do that, which is what Drupal uses internally to set different global theme variables like $theme_path, which is the variable you are looking for.

Related

How I can print all variable of a hook in drupal 8?

I'm very new in Drupal 8 and I have issue now with hook. Mainly I though that I don't clearly understand structure and hook definition in Drupal 8.
So my main problem is that I have some hook to interact with main menu (add custom class name to ul, li and link, a tag). I can do it by changing template file and now try to do it with any hook.
Although I found that some hook relating to menu ex. hook_contextual_links_alter (link: https://api.drupal.org/api/drupal/core%21lib%21Drupal%21Core%21Menu%21menu.api.php/function/hook_contextual_links_alter/8.9.x).
At the end of this hook we have the code related:
function hook_contextual_links_alter(array &$links, $group, array $route_parameters) {
if ($group == 'menu') {
// Dynamically use the menu name for the title of the menu_edit contextual
// link.
$menu = \Drupal::entityTypeManager()
->getStorage('menu')
->load($route_parameters['menu']);
$links['menu_edit']['title'] = t('Edit menu: #label', [
'#label' => $menu
->label(),
]);
}
}
So I have installed devel module with kint function and in my .theme file and try:
function hook_contextual_links_alter(array &$links, $group, array $route_parameters) {
kint($links);
}
and then reload my Home page but nothing showed. But I can get some information about other like:
function eg_learn_theme_suggestions_page_alter(&$suggestions, $variables) {
kint($suggestions);
}
So what happens here? Can you help to explain if how I can print the variable of this hook (in .theme file) and the site page to see the printing variable?
In general when I found a hook, how I can print there array and check it in website?
There are some problems about your approach:
When implementing a hook, you must replace "hook" with the module name/theme name where you put the hook function inside. For example, if you want implement hook_contextual_links_alter in your_custom module, it becomes your_custom_contextual_links_alter().
Not all hook can be implemented in the theme. Some hook can only be implemented in modules (in .module file). You can read more here.
In your case, I think hook_preprocess_menu would be more suitable. You can implement it in your custom theme like this:
function <your_theme_name>_preprocess_menu(&$variables) {
if ($variables['menu_name'] == 'main') {
kint($variables);
}
}

How to use multiple buddypress mobile themes

How can I use multiple themes for buddypress mobile, I want to switch quickly between those themes. This is for the purpose of creating styles and testing theme. Also comparing those themes.
Create a file /wp-content/sunrise.php. There you can write smth like this:
add_filter('option_template', 'filter_get_option');
add_filter('option_stylesheet', 'filter_get_option');
function filter_get_option($value){
// here you can based on url or any other thing
// change the theme on a fly, like this:
if(true){
$value = 'theme_1';
}else{
$value = 'theme_2';
}
return $value;
}
This is rather like a hack, but it works. theme_1 and theme_1 are themes folders (those inside /wp-content/themes/

Changing admin theme programmatically in drupal

How can I set my admin theme programmatically?
Now am using public theme for anonymous users and member theme for members. Am using role theme switcher to achieve this.
Now I want my admin theme as rubik. I tried to change it from /admin/settings/admin, but it is not effecting.
Is there any way to do this? I want public theme for my site front end and rubik theme for backend.
The admin theme is stored in the variable table; you can update it in code like so:
variable_set('admin_theme', 'theme_name');
You can also assign a theme to a specific path.
To apply admin theme to path /SOMEPATH/*
function MYMODULE_custom_theme() {
if (arg(0) == 'SOMEPATH') {
return variable_get('admin_theme');
}
}
To apply admin theme to path alias /SOMEPATH/*
function MYMODULE_custom_theme() {
//drupal_get_path_alias() may interfere with Global Redirect module
$arg = explode('/', substr(drupal_get_path_alias(request_uri(), 1), strlen(base_path())));
if ($arg[0] == 'SOMEPATH') {
return variable_get('admin_theme');
}
}
To apply a custom theme to /admin/*
function MYMODULE_custom_theme() {
if (arg(0) == 'admin') {
return 'MYADMINTHEME'; //list_themes() to see available themes
}
}
Pick a function and insert it inside your module, replacing MYMODULE with a module name.

How can I customize a specific node in Drupal 6 WHEN a custom template has already been applied to the node's content type?

[For Drupal 6] Let's say I've created a content type called "my_content_type". I can override the default template for that entire content-type by creating "page-node-my_content_type.tpl.php". But, what would be the best way to then further customize a single node of that content type (e.g., node 5555)?
I tried the following, but none worked:
page-node-5555.tpl.php
page-node-my_content_theme-5555.tpl.php
node-5555.tpl.php
None of these work. They all continue to use my original content-type template.
Drupal's page templates work on a suggestion system. Based on the current URL, an array of possible template files is created. It loops through the array (in reverse order) looking for template files that exists. The first one it finds, it will use.
drupal's theme system provides a hook for you to modify the template suggestions.. open up your template.php and find
function phptemplate_preprocess_page(&$vars) {
the $vars variable is what contains the suggestions, specifically $vars['template_files']
By default the only page suggestions that are available are
page.tpl.php
page-node.tpl.php
page-node-[node_id].tpl.php
As far as im aware, page-node-[node_type].tpl.php does not work by default, so its likely you have already modified the preprocess_page template to added in this functionality.
However if you want to add more specific templates you could do something like this...
function phptemplate_preprocess_page(&$variables) {
if ($variables['node']->type != "") {
$variables['template_files'][] = "page-node-" . $variables['node']->type;
$variables['template_files'][] = "page-node-" . $variables['node']->type . "-" . $variables['node']->nid;
}
}
this will allow the following hierarchy of template suggestions
page.tpl.php
page-node.tpl.php
page-node-[node_id].tpl.php
page-node-[node_type].tpl.php
page-node-[node_type]-[node_id].tpl.php
In Drupal 7 just copy the page.tpl.php template and rename it as
page--node--[node:id].tpl.php
Clear cache and start tweaking..
function phptemplate_preprocess_page(&$variables) {
if ($variables['node']->type != "") {
$variables['template_files'][] = "page-node-" . $variables['node']->type;
$variables['template_files'][] = "page-node-" . $variables['node']->type . "-" . $variables['node']->nid;
}
}
This code should not work because hook_preprocess_page() does not get passed any node information. hook_preprocess_node() does. So you can easily create a custom node.tpl, but you cannot easily create a custom page.tpl for a specific node. Not that I've been able to figure out anyway :)
Later...
In default Drupal, page-node-NID.tpl.php will work with no special coding. On a site of mine, it wasn't working, however, and I used the following code to make it work:
/**
* Implementation of hook_preprocess_page().
*/
function MYMODULE_preprocess_page(&$variables) {
// Allow per-node theming of page.tpl
if (arg(0) == 'node' && is_numeric(arg(1))) {
$variables['template_files'][] = "page-node-" . arg(1);
}
}

WordPress template_include - how to hook it properly

I'm currently coding a WP plugin and would need to override templates.
My filter hook looks like that - and it executes:
add_filter('template_include', 'mcd_set_template',10);
function mcd_set_template() just returns the required path as string - or the default WP template in case the file not exists.
I'm toying with this for hours already, even could include that alternate template (but it appears at the bottom of the page).
So my question is, how to force WP 3.2.1 to just load another template file instead - and which priority is required??
Update:
Also I noticed when using var_dump ... it outputs almost at the end of the file - but should appear before the opening HTML tag...
According to this ticket it should work with template_include hook: http://core.trac.wordpress.org/ticket/11242
Or is the only way to hook these filters instead:
http://codex.wordpress.org/Template_Hierarchy#Filter_Hierarchy
?
You could use template_redirect as shown above, but that does require exit, and it does trample on everything else WordPress would normally do to find the current template. You may want to let that happen and then apply logic to the current template.
Using some of what is above...
add_action('template_include', 'mcd_set_template');
function mcd_set_template() {
return locate_template('templatename.php');
}
That is fairly simple, you can also pass an array to locate_template() to define a hierarchy. If you were to use 'template_redirect as shown above, you should still be using locate_template, and this is how.
add_action('template_redirect', 'mcd_set_template');
function mcd_set_template() {
/**
* Order of templates in this array reflect their hierarchy.
* You'll want to have fallbacks like index.php in case yours is not found.
*/
$templates = array('templatename.php', 'othertemplate.php', 'index.php');
/**
* The first param will be prefixed to '_template' to create a filter
* The second will be passed to locate_template and loaded.
*/
include( get_query_template('mcd', $templates) );
exit;
}
Finally, the best way would be to filter specific types instead of the whole hierarchy. For example you could filter 'category_template' or 'page_template'. That would be more specific, it would avoid messing with the whole template hierarchy if you don't want to - and it lets WordPress do more of the heavy lifting
For example:
add_filter('category_template', 'filter_category_template');
function filter_category_template($template){
/* Get current category */
$category = get_queried_object();
/* Create hierarchical list of desired templates */
$templates = array (
'category.php',
'custom-category-template.php',
'category-{$category->slug}.php',
'category-{$category->term_id}.php',
'index.php'
);
return locate_template($templates);
}
You can of course create that array of hierarchical templates any time you use locate_template(). Using this method, its easy to see how easily you could create all sorts of very detailed and specific hierarchies either as part of or separate from the native Template Hierarchy.
Have you tried using an add_action instead? For example, you might want to try something like the following in your plugin:
add_action('template_redirect', 'mcd_set_template');
//Redirect to a preferred template.
function mcd_set_template() {
$template_path = TEMPLATEPATH . '/' . "templatename.php";
if(file_exists($template_path)){
include($template_path);
exit;
}
}
Here is a helpful reference: http://www.mihaivalentin.com/wordpress-tutorial-load-the-template-you-want-with-template_redirect/

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