Book Image

WordPress Plugin Development Cookbook - Second Edition

By : Yannick Lefebvre
Book Image

WordPress Plugin Development Cookbook - Second Edition

By: Yannick Lefebvre

Overview of this book

WordPress is a popular, powerful, and open Content Management System. Learning how to extend its capabilities allows you to unleash its full potential, whether you're an administrator trying to find the right extension, a developer with a great idea to enhance the platform for the community, or a website developer working to fulfill a client's needs. This book shows readers how to navigate WordPress' vast set of API functions to create high-quality plugins with easy-to-configure administration interfaces. With new recipes and materials updated for the latest versions of WordPress 4.x, this second edition teaches you how to create plugins of varying complexity ranging from a few lines of code to complex extensions that provide intricate new capabilities. You'll start by using the basic mechanisms provided in WordPress to create plugins and execute custom user code. You will then see how to design administration panels, enhance the post editor with custom fields, store custom data, and modify site behavior based on the value of custom fields. You'll safely incorporate dynamic elements on web pages using scripting languages, and build new widgets that users will be able to add to WordPress sidebars and widget areas. By the end of this book, you will be able to create WordPress plugins to perform any task you can imagine.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Dedication
Preface

Removing plugin data on deletion


As with any piece of software, it is quite possible that users might decide to remove a plugin from their WordPress installation if they no longer require the functionality that it provides or they have found an alternative that they prefer.

When this happens, the plugin author must decide if all of the configuration data stored in the site's database should be left in place, making it easier to re-install the plugin down the road, or to remove all of this information, leaving a clean database behind.

This recipe shows how to create a de-installation function that will remove options data from a site's database.

Getting ready

You should have already followed the Storing user settings using arrays recipe to have options data ready for deletion, and the resulting plugin should still be active in your development site. Alternatively, you can get the resulting code (Chapter 3/ch2-page-header-output/ch2-page-header-output-v3.php) from the downloaded code bundle. You...