Book Image

Moodle 1.9 Extension Development

Book Image

Moodle 1.9 Extension Development

Overview of this book

Moodle gives you the power to create and customize feature-rich plug-ins. If you can write Moodle plug-ins, you can make it do just about anything. From making the site easier to administer, to new features, to completely changing the way it looks; plug-ins are the method Moodle offers to customize and extend its functionality. This book will show you how to build all sorts of Moodle plug-ins: admin plug-ins, Blocks, Activities, Grading components, Reports, Fliters that change the way your site works and looks. You will develop standard Moodle plug-ins such as Activities, Filters, and Blocks by creating functioning code that you can execute in your own Moodle installation. Writing modular plug-ins for Moodle will be a large focus of this book.This book will take you inside Moodle and provide you with the ability to develop code the “Moodle way”.This book will expose you to all of the core code functions in Moodle, in a progressive, understandable way. You will learn what libraries are available, what the API calls are, how it is structured and how it can be expanded beyond the plug-in system.You will begin by getting an understanding of the basic architecture that Moodle uses to operate in. Next you will build your first plug-in; a block. You will carry on building other Moodle plug-ins, gaining knowledge of the “Moodle way” of coding, before plunging deeper into the API and inner libraries. Lastly, you will learn how to integrate Moodle with other systems using a variety of methods.When you have completed, you will have a solid understanding of Moodle programming and knowledge of how to extend its functionality in whatever way you want.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Moodle 1.9 Extension Development
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
Preface

Finishing view.php


The view.php file is responsible for displaying an individual activity and its interface. For our activity Foo! module, we have consolidated all of the functions into one page. In real world activities, it is common to see functions such as grading and reporting in separate PHP files.

Including submit_form.php

Around line 15 of the view.php template, we need to include our submit form. We define the new form in the file submit_form.php.

The form file works almost identically to the add instance form that we covered earlier. We use this to display our response submission form. To create the form, we extend the moodleform class. SeeChapter 13, Building Forms with formslib for more information:

class foo_submit_form extends moodleform {
function definition() {
global $COURSE, $CFG;

Your code goes here

Starting around line 71 of the view.php file in the NEWMODULE template, there is an echo statement, echo 'YOUR CODE GOES HERE'. Most of the work we need to do to view.php will...