Walker
A class for displaying various tree-like structures.
Description
Extend the Walker class to use it, see examples below. Child classes do not need to implement all of the abstract methods in the class. The child only needs to implement the methods that are needed.
More Information
The Walker class was implemented in WordPress 2.1 to provide developers with a means to traverse tree-like data structures for the purpose of rendering HTML.
Tree-Like Structures
In terms of web development, a tree-like structure is an array or object with hierarchical data – such that it can be visually represented with a root element and subtrees of children.
Examples of WordPress objects with data that are structured in a “tree-like” way include navigational menus, page categories, and breadcrumbs.
Role of Walker
Walker is an abstract class. In order to be useful the class must be extended and any necessary abstract methods defined (see “Abstract Methods” below for more).
The class itself simply “walks” through each node in a tree (e.g. an object or associative array) and executes an abstract function at each node. In order to take an action at one of these nodes, a developer must define those abstract methods within a custom child class.
Although the Walker class has many uses, one of the most common usages by developers is outputting HTML for custom menus (usually ones that have been defined using the Appearance → Menus screen in the Administration Screens).
Abstraction Note: The Walker class was created prior to PHP5 and so does not make use of PHP5’s explicit abstraction keywords or features. In this case, the class and its methods are implicitly abstract (PHP4 compatible) and not explicitly abstract (PHP5 compatible). Developers are not required to implement any methods of the class, and may use or override only those methods that are needed. If you chose not to extend a specific abstract method, that method will simply do nothing.
Methods & Properties
Please refer source code for the complete lists of methods and properties. Below description may cover some of them.
Properties
Note that the properties of the Walker class are intended to be set by the extending class and probably should not vary over the lifetime of an instance.
- $db_fields
-
Required. Because Walker can take any type of tree object, you need to specify what object properties the Walker class should treat as parent id and item id (usually these are the names of database fields, hence the property name). This property must be an associative array with two keys:
'parent'
and'id'
. The value of each key should be the names of the object properties that hold the parent id and item id, respectively.
- $tree_type
- Optional. The Walker class itself makes no use of this value, although it may be useful to developers. Internally, WordPress’s own extended Walker classes will set this to values like ‘category’ or ‘page’.
- $max_pages
- Optional. The maximum number of pages walked by the paged walker.
Usage
There are two general use-cases for the Walker class.
Usage as a Callback
Some WordPress APIs and functions ( such as wp_nav_menu() ) allow developers to specify a custom Walker class as a callback. This is the most common usage of the Walker class by developers.
In this scenario, the class is automatically passed a tree of elements. When creating a custom walker for this scenario, you will generally only need to define the abstract methods needed to create the kind of structure you want. Everything else is handled automatically for you.
Custom Usage
It is also possible to call your custom Walker classes manually. This is particularly useful for plugin developers.
In this scenario, you can initiate the walker by calling either the walk() or paged_walk() method of your child class, with the appropriate parameters.
Source
File: wp-includes/class-wp-walker.php
class Walker { /** * What the class handles. * * @since 2.1.0 * @var string */ public $tree_type; /** * DB fields to use. * * @since 2.1.0 * @var array */ public $db_fields; /** * Max number of pages walked by the paged walker * * @since 2.7.0 * @var int */ public $max_pages = 1; /** * Whether the current element has children or not. * * To be used in start_el(). * * @since 4.0.0 * @var bool */ public $has_children; /** * Starts the list before the elements are added. * * The $args parameter holds additional values that may be used with the child * class methods. This method is called at the start of the output list. * * @since 2.1.0 * @abstract * * @param string $output Used to append additional content (passed by reference). * @param int $depth Depth of the item. * @param array $args An array of additional arguments. */ public function start_lvl( &$output, $depth = 0, $args = array() ) {} /** * Ends the list of after the elements are added. * * The $args parameter holds additional values that may be used with the child * class methods. This method finishes the list at the end of output of the elements. * * @since 2.1.0 * @abstract * * @param string $output Used to append additional content (passed by reference). * @param int $depth Depth of the item. * @param array $args An array of additional arguments. */ public function end_lvl( &$output, $depth = 0, $args = array() ) {} /** * Start the element output. * * The $args parameter holds additional values that may be used with the child * class methods. Includes the element output also. * * @since 2.1.0 * @abstract * * @param string $output Used to append additional content (passed by reference). * @param object $object The data object. * @param int $depth Depth of the item. * @param array $args An array of additional arguments. * @param int $current_object_id ID of the current item. */ public function start_el( &$output, $object, $depth = 0, $args = array(), $current_object_id = 0 ) {} /** * Ends the element output, if needed. * * The $args parameter holds additional values that may be used with the child class methods. * * @since 2.1.0 * @abstract * * @param string $output Used to append additional content (passed by reference). * @param object $object The data object. * @param int $depth Depth of the item. * @param array $args An array of additional arguments. */ public function end_el( &$output, $object, $depth = 0, $args = array() ) {} /** * Traverse elements to create list from elements. * * Display one element if the element doesn't have any children otherwise, * display the element and its children. Will only traverse up to the max * depth and no ignore elements under that depth. It is possible to set the * max depth to include all depths, see walk() method. * * This method should not be called directly, use the walk() method instead. * * @since 2.5.0 * * @param object $element Data object. * @param array $children_elements List of elements to continue traversing (passed by reference). * @param int $max_depth Max depth to traverse. * @param int $depth Depth of current element. * @param array $args An array of arguments. * @param string $output Used to append additional content (passed by reference). */ public function display_element( $element, &$children_elements, $max_depth, $depth, $args, &$output ) { if ( ! $element ) { return; } $id_field = $this->db_fields['id']; $id = $element->$id_field; // Display this element. $this->has_children = ! empty( $children_elements[ $id ] ); if ( isset( $args[0] ) && is_array( $args[0] ) ) { $args[0]['has_children'] = $this->has_children; // Back-compat. } $this->start_el( $output, $element, $depth, ...array_values( $args ) ); // Descend only when the depth is right and there are children for this element. if ( ( 0 == $max_depth || $max_depth > $depth + 1 ) && isset( $children_elements[ $id ] ) ) { foreach ( $children_elements[ $id ] as $child ) { if ( ! isset( $newlevel ) ) { $newlevel = true; // Start the child delimiter. $this->start_lvl( $output, $depth, ...array_values( $args ) ); } $this->display_element( $child, $children_elements, $max_depth, $depth + 1, $args, $output ); } unset( $children_elements[ $id ] ); } if ( isset( $newlevel ) && $newlevel ) { // End the child delimiter. $this->end_lvl( $output, $depth, ...array_values( $args ) ); } // End this element. $this->end_el( $output, $element, $depth, ...array_values( $args ) ); } /** * Display array of elements hierarchically. * * Does not assume any existing order of elements. * * $max_depth = -1 means flatly display every element. * $max_depth = 0 means display all levels. * $max_depth > 0 specifies the number of display levels. * * @since 2.1.0 * @since 5.3.0 Formalized the existing `...$args` parameter by adding it * to the function signature. * * @param array $elements An array of elements. * @param int $max_depth The maximum hierarchical depth. * @param mixed ...$args Optional additional arguments. * @return string The hierarchical item output. */ public function walk( $elements, $max_depth, ...$args ) { $output = ''; // Invalid parameter or nothing to walk. if ( $max_depth < -1 || empty( $elements ) ) { return $output; } $parent_field = $this->db_fields['parent']; // Flat display. if ( -1 == $max_depth ) { $empty_array = array(); foreach ( $elements as $e ) { $this->display_element( $e, $empty_array, 1, 0, $args, $output ); } return $output; } /* * Need to display in hierarchical order. * Separate elements into two buckets: top level and children elements. * Children_elements is two dimensional array, eg. * Children_elements[10][] contains all sub-elements whose parent is 10. */ $top_level_elements = array(); $children_elements = array(); foreach ( $elements as $e ) { if ( empty( $e->$parent_field ) ) { $top_level_elements[] = $e; } else { $children_elements[ $e->$parent_field ][] = $e; } } /* * When none of the elements is top level. * Assume the first one must be root of the sub elements. */ if ( empty( $top_level_elements ) ) { $first = array_slice( $elements, 0, 1 ); $root = $first[0]; $top_level_elements = array(); $children_elements = array(); foreach ( $elements as $e ) { if ( $root->$parent_field == $e->$parent_field ) { $top_level_elements[] = $e; } else { $children_elements[ $e->$parent_field ][] = $e; } } } foreach ( $top_level_elements as $e ) { $this->display_element( $e, $children_elements, $max_depth, 0, $args, $output ); } /* * If we are displaying all levels, and remaining children_elements is not empty, * then we got orphans, which should be displayed regardless. */ if ( ( 0 == $max_depth ) && count( $children_elements ) > 0 ) { $empty_array = array(); foreach ( $children_elements as $orphans ) { foreach ( $orphans as $op ) { $this->display_element( $op, $empty_array, 1, 0, $args, $output ); } } } return $output; } /** * paged_walk() - produce a page of nested elements * * Given an array of hierarchical elements, the maximum depth, a specific page number, * and number of elements per page, this function first determines all top level root elements * belonging to that page, then lists them and all of their children in hierarchical order. * * $max_depth = 0 means display all levels. * $max_depth > 0 specifies the number of display levels. * * @since 2.7.0 * @since 5.3.0 Formalized the existing `...$args` parameter by adding it * to the function signature. * * @param array $elements * @param int $max_depth The maximum hierarchical depth. * @param int $page_num The specific page number, beginning with 1. * @param int $per_page * @param mixed ...$args Optional additional arguments. * @return string XHTML of the specified page of elements */ public function paged_walk( $elements, $max_depth, $page_num, $per_page, ...$args ) { if ( empty( $elements ) || $max_depth < -1 ) { return ''; } $output = ''; $parent_field = $this->db_fields['parent']; $count = -1; if ( -1 == $max_depth ) { $total_top = count( $elements ); } if ( $page_num < 1 || $per_page < 0 ) { // No paging. $paging = false; $start = 0; if ( -1 == $max_depth ) { $end = $total_top; } $this->max_pages = 1; } else { $paging = true; $start = ( (int) $page_num - 1 ) * (int) $per_page; $end = $start + $per_page; if ( -1 == $max_depth ) { $this->max_pages = ceil( $total_top / $per_page ); } } // Flat display. if ( -1 == $max_depth ) { if ( ! empty( $args[0]['reverse_top_level'] ) ) { $elements = array_reverse( $elements ); $oldstart = $start; $start = $total_top - $end; $end = $total_top - $oldstart; } $empty_array = array(); foreach ( $elements as $e ) { $count++; if ( $count < $start ) { continue; } if ( $count >= $end ) { break; } $this->display_element( $e, $empty_array, 1, 0, $args, $output ); } return $output; } /* * Separate elements into two buckets: top level and children elements. * Children_elements is two dimensional array, e.g. * $children_elements[10][] contains all sub-elements whose parent is 10. */ $top_level_elements = array(); $children_elements = array(); foreach ( $elements as $e ) { if ( empty( $e->$parent_field ) ) { $top_level_elements[] = $e; } else { $children_elements[ $e->$parent_field ][] = $e; } } $total_top = count( $top_level_elements ); if ( $paging ) { $this->max_pages = ceil( $total_top / $per_page ); } else { $end = $total_top; } if ( ! empty( $args[0]['reverse_top_level'] ) ) { $top_level_elements = array_reverse( $top_level_elements ); $oldstart = $start; $start = $total_top - $end; $end = $total_top - $oldstart; } if ( ! empty( $args[0]['reverse_children'] ) ) { foreach ( $children_elements as $parent => $children ) { $children_elements[ $parent ] = array_reverse( $children ); } } foreach ( $top_level_elements as $e ) { $count++; // For the last page, need to unset earlier children in order to keep track of orphans. if ( $end >= $total_top && $count < $start ) { $this->unset_children( $e, $children_elements ); } if ( $count < $start ) { continue; } if ( $count >= $end ) { break; } $this->display_element( $e, $children_elements, $max_depth, 0, $args, $output ); } if ( $end >= $total_top && count( $children_elements ) > 0 ) { $empty_array = array(); foreach ( $children_elements as $orphans ) { foreach ( $orphans as $op ) { $this->display_element( $op, $empty_array, 1, 0, $args, $output ); } } } return $output; } /** * Calculates the total number of root elements. * * @since 2.7.0 * * @param array $elements Elements to list. * @return int Number of root elements. */ public function get_number_of_root_elements( $elements ) { $num = 0; $parent_field = $this->db_fields['parent']; foreach ( $elements as $e ) { if ( empty( $e->$parent_field ) ) { $num++; } } return $num; } /** * Unset all the children for a given top level element. * * @since 2.7.0 * * @param object $e * @param array $children_elements */ public function unset_children( $e, &$children_elements ) { if ( ! $e || ! $children_elements ) { return; } $id_field = $this->db_fields['id']; $id = $e->$id_field; if ( ! empty( $children_elements[ $id ] ) && is_array( $children_elements[ $id ] ) ) { foreach ( (array) $children_elements[ $id ] as $child ) { $this->unset_children( $child, $children_elements ); } } unset( $children_elements[ $id ] ); } }
Methods
- __get — Make private properties readable for backwards compatibility.
- __isset — Make private properties checkable for backwards compatibility.
- __set — Make private properties settable for backwards compatibility.
- __unset — Make private properties un-settable for backwards compatibility.
- display_element — Traverse elements to create list from elements.
- end_el — Ends the element output, if needed.
- end_lvl — Ends the list of after the elements are added.
- get_number_of_root_elements — Calculates the total number of root elements.
- paged_walk — paged_walk() - produce a page of nested elements
- start_el — Start the element output.
- start_lvl — Starts the list before the elements are added.
- unset_children — Unset all the children for a given top level element.
- walk — Display array of elements hierarchically.
Changelog
Version | Description |
---|---|
2.1.0 | Introduced. |
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Licensed under the GNU GPLv2+ License.
https://developer.wordpress.org/reference/classes/walker