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#121 2020-02-04 14:33:37
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#122 2020-02-04 17:00:37
Re: Dev news
Every so often, I wonder how useful it would be to have a scheduled Textpattern tag focus, say one tag per week, and the collective knowledge / experience of people here work on documenting the things that might not be commonly known. Examples, explanations, that sort of thing.
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#123 2020-02-04 18:05:22
Re: Dev news
Very useful, I expect. Stuff gets buried in the forum so if we transferred those examples to tag docs or Txp Tips, it increases visibility and usefulness.
Tangentially, we need to fix up the tag builder with the new attributes. Although not vital, it’d be nice to add them, if they apply. I can probably do that in the next day or so unless someone gets to it first.
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#124 2020-02-04 18:16:02
Re: Dev news
Bloke wrote #321510:
Very useful, I expect. Stuff gets buried in the forum so if we transferred those examples to tag docs or Txp Tips, it increases visibility and usefulness.
If others agree I would include in the docs either Julian’s (his edit at the end of the post) or Oleg’s responces to a question which I feel that it will be asked again at some point in the future.
Yiannis
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#125 2020-02-04 22:27:00
Re: Dev news
gaekwad wrote #321509:
Every so often, I wonder how useful it would be to have a scheduled Textpattern tag focus, say one tag per week, and the collective knowledge / experience of people here work on documenting the things that might not be commonly known. Examples, explanations, that sort of thing.
Useful, I am sure. Sometimes people find interesting ways to do things with the standard tags, and sometimes mentioned in the forums, deep down a forum thread, or maybe document it in an obscure blog post.
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#126 2020-02-05 07:11:53
Re: Dev news
Yeah I’d like to see the new pagination methods in a blog post – would be good to know.
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#127 2020-02-05 10:50:30
Re: Dev news
You can test this code (in any place) to get the main ideas:
<txp:pages pg="page" total="100" evaluate="2,6,4">
<nav>
<txp:newer showalways>«</txp:newer>
<txp:newer shift><txp:yield item="page" /></txp:newer>
<txp:newer shift="-2" link="">...</txp:newer>
<txp:pages total shift="2" break=" "><txp:yield item="page" /></txp:pages>
<txp:older shift="-2" link="">...</txp:older>
<txp:older shift><txp:yield item="page" /></txp:older>
<txp:older showalways>»</txp:older>
</nav>
</txp:pages>
It will generate nav
bar for 100 links numbered by page
URL parameter: ?page=1
etc.
< 1 ... 5 6 7 8 9 ... 100 >
Explanations:
<txp:pages pg="page" total="100">...</txp:pages>
sets the number of pages and page URL parameter (needed only for custom pagination).<txp:newer shift />
points to the first page,<txp:older shift />
to the last one.<txp:newer shift="-2"/ >
points to the 2nd page from the end of ‘newer’ direction, i.e. the second page. Similarly,<txp:older shift="-2" />
points to thelast - 1
page.<txp:pages total shift="2" />
outputsn-2, n-1, n, n+1, n+2
links, adjusting the output ifn
is close to start/end.<txp:yield item="page" />
outputs processed page numbers.link
andshowalways
attributes are self-explanatory.
Now, why evaluate
is needed? Suppose that there are only three pages and we are on the third one. Tag by tag, this block would output < 1 ... 1 2 3 3 >
which is obviously not desired. To fix it, these tags (with few exceptions) are instructed not to output already shown pages. Since txp processes tags downwards, we thus get < 1 ... 3 >
which is better but not ideal yet, because we expect 2
in place of ...
. The problem is that <txp:newer shift="-2" />
is processed before <txp:pages total shift="2" />
and ‘shows’ the second page. The solution is to alter the processing order via evaluate="2,6,4"
attribute, which will first process the 2nd tag (<txp:newer shift />
), then the 6th one (<txp:older shift />
), followed by the 4th (<txp:pages total shift="2" />
) and finally all the others.
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#128 2020-02-05 11:09:56
Re: Dev news
I’ve sprinkled some accessibility attributes into Oleg’s example above (you can change "Blog navigation"
to whatever description you prefer):
<txp:pages pg="page" total="100" evaluate="2,6,4">
<nav aria-label="Blog navigation">
<txp:newer showalways><span aria-label="Go to previous page">«</span></txp:newer>
<txp:newer shift><span aria-label="Go to first page"><txp:yield item="page" /></span></txp:newer>
<txp:newer shift="-2" link=""><span role="separator" aria-label="More pages">…</span></txp:newer>
<txp:pages total shift="2" break=" "><span aria-label="Go to page <txp:yield item="page" />"><txp:yield item="page" /></span></txp:pages>
<txp:older shift="-2" link=""><span role="separator" aria-label="More pages">…</span></txp:older>
<txp:older shift><span aria-label="Go to last page"><txp:yield item="page" /></span></txp:older>
<txp:older showalways><span aria-label="Go to next page">»</span></txp:older>
</nav>
</txp:pages>
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#129 2020-02-05 13:19:07
Re: Dev news
I love this!
I’m still gonna have to play with this newer/older stuff to get my head round it, and also to try it alongside regular use of newer/older to compare. Feels like it’s almost ready for prime time.
One thing I was interested in exploring with the above example, was to make the ellipses do something. A common issue with these types of navigation construct is that you’re somewhere in the list and want to move along slightly more quickly, but you’re limited to jumping to either end, or to two either side of the page you’re on, maximum. This makes iterating pages slower than it could be.
So I wondered if the ellipses could jump an entire set so if you’re showing:
< 1 ... 5 6 7 8 9 ... 100 >
then clicking the rightmost ellipses would reveal:
< 1 ... 10 11 12 13 14 ... 100 >
Through judicial use of the shift
attribute to offset from “the current page” of <txp:pages>
rather from “either end of the list”, we get this:
<txp:pages total="100" evaluate="2,6,4">
<nav>
<txp:newer showalways>«</txp:newer>
<txp:newer shift><txp:yield item="page" /></txp:newer>
<txp:pages shift="-5">...</txp:pages>
<txp:pages total shift="2" break=" "><txp:yield item="page" /></txp:pages>
<txp:pages shift="5">...</txp:pages>
<txp:older shift><txp:yield item="page" /></txp:older>
<txp:older showalways>»</txp:older>
</nav>
</txp:pages>
Notice I’ve dropped the pg
attribute because I was paginating a regular article list on my site so wanted the standard ?pg=
. Works a treat!
I am, however, intrigued by the total
attribute. I have 28 pages of articles on my test site, built up over time. The pagination works nicely to jump around the pages fairly quickly. If I set total="100"
in the outer <txp:pages>
tag, when I’m on (say) page 21, I get:
« 1 ... 19 20 21 22 23 ... 28 »
No matter what value I set for total
I get the same output – even if I use total="1"
, presumably because Txp knows I have 28 pages and ignores the attribute. I thought it might be some maximum or something. However, if I omit the total
, I get this:
« ... 19 20 21 22 23 ... 28 »
Notice the link to page ‘1’ is missing. Bug? Or by design? Is total
required to set things up, even if it’s ignored?
So I went a bit further. I was curious why you needed to set the valueless total
attribute in the central <txp:pages>
tag. Turns out it’s vital. But why? It doesn’t seem to set up the ‘current’ page because if I omit the total
from the central <txp:pages>
tag, I get this when I’m on page 21:
« 1 ... 23 ... 28 »
i.e. it’s added ‘2’ to the current page and made a link to it. Why does total
do this? Is it required for the yield attribute to function properly?
If I also omit the total
from the outer tag, the ‘1’ link disappears again, as it did before.
I presume there’s a functional reason why the total
is needed, I just can’t figure out from a logical end-user perspective why it needs to be present for the tag to work, when the surrounding older and newer tags – and indeed the <txp:pages>
tags for the ellipses – don’t.
EDIT: also, with <txp:yield item="page">
, it would be handy to know what other items we could output here when we document this. There appears to be a link between the URL attribute ‘page’ and the yield item in this example, when there isn’t. The yield name MUST be page
regardless of what is used in the URL pagination, so maybe we should choose a different URL var just to make it clear.
EDIT 2: Interestingly, changing my central Ignore this and see forum.textpattern.com/viewtopic.php?pid=321523#p321523<txp:pages>
tag thus:
<txp:pages total shift="3" break=" "><txp:yield item="page" /></txp:pages>
Results in a curious output when I near the extremities of the pagination.
On page 22: « 1 ... 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 ... 28 »
OK
On page 23: « 1 ... 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 28 »
Missing page 27 or ellipses
On page 24: « 1 ... 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 »
OK
On page 25: « 1 ... 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 »
OK
On page 26: « 1 ... 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 »
OK, but why is the lower limit not 21?
On page 27: « 1 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 »
Urk? No lower ellipses, and still 22 lower limit?
Last edited by Bloke (2020-02-05 13:46:10)
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#130 2020-02-05 14:08:08
Re: Dev news
Without pg
attribute <txp:pages />
uses the current one, which is the default pg
and then total
defaults to $thispage['nimPages']
too. Try <txp:pages pg="pg" total="100" />
instead.
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#131 2020-02-05 14:26:46
Re: Dev news
etc wrote #321522:
Try
<txp:pages pg="pg" total="100" />
instead.
Okay, that makes sense and is important info to go in the docs, thanks. Doing that makes the page extremity whatever I set, even if it’s beyond the number of pages I have, and fixes the missing ‘1’ thing. That’s cool.
So for people that are using this to paginate regular Txp articles, they should always use the pg="pg"
attribute, and either:
a) omit the outer total
attribute to let Txp calculate the maximum.
b) use the outer total
attribute if they want a fixed maximum number of pages.
That clears one thing up. Just the thing about the total in the central <txp:pages>
tag to go.
Edit: The ‘Edit 2’ in my post above was me being stupid. Altering the step in the central <txp:pages>
tag requires an adjustment in the ellipses tags either side of it to balance it. so they needed to be:
<txp:pages shift="-7">...</txp:pages>
<txp:pages total shift="3" break=" "><txp:yield item="page" /></txp:pages>
<txp:pages shift="7">...</txp:pages>
Sorry for the false info.
Last edited by Bloke (2020-02-05 14:54:59)
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Txp Builders – finely-crafted code, design and Txp
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#132 2020-02-05 16:52:43
Re: Dev news
Bloke wrote #321523:
So for people that are using this to paginate regular Txp articles, they should always use the
pg="pg"
attribute, and either:a) omit the outer
total
attribute to let Txp calculate the maximum.
b) use the outertotal
attribute if they want a fixed maximum number of pages.
Not exactly, sorry. Explicitly setting pg="pg"
does not reset total
, it acts like any other pg
value, leaving you the freedom to abuse it (and create meaningless txp links). To reset to defaults, use valueless pg
(then total
will be ignored): <txp:pages pg />
.
That clears one thing up. Just the thing about the total in the central
<txp:pages>
tag to go.
You’ll probably need to adjust the ellipses shift
, to avoid it prematurely disappear when close to the extremities: shift = min (7, current - 2)
or something like that. The total number of remaining pages is given by <txp:newer/older total />
.
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