Reputation: 5690
I have the following piece of Ajax which calls a php file which intends to return the HTML content of a shortcode.
The Ajax call looks like this :
var PostData = "Action=refresh-cart";
jQuery.ajax({
dataType: "text",
type: 'POST',
url : '<?php echo plugins_url( 'class-booking-system/class-booking-process.php', dirname(__FILE__) );?>',
cache: false,
data : PostData,
complete : function() { },
success: function(data) {
// jQuery("#loading-img").hide();
alert(data);
// jQuery("#join-class-div-3").html(data);
}
});
The PHP looks like this :
<?php
require_once( ABSPATH . '/wp-includes/shortcodes.php' );
if(isset($_POST['Action'])) {
$Action = $_POST['Action'];
if($Action == "refresh-cart") {
echo do_shortcode('[woocommerce_cart]');
}
}
?>
However when I call my Ajax method it returns an HTTP 500 - which I assume means the do_shortcode function was not found in this context. How can I give my plugin the ability to call this wordpress function via ajax?
Upvotes: 1
Views: 11790
Reputation: 26319
I think you should take a look at the Codex article on using Ajax in Plugins. It provides a very good example on how to go about making ajax calls in WordPress.
Adapting their example to your code I get something like the following:
First we load the javascript. We also pass some javascript variables via wp_localize_script
. In this case, we're going to pass the admin's URL for processing all ajax calls.
wp_enqueue_script( 'ajax-script', plugins_url( '/js/my_query.js', __FILE__ ), array('jquery') );
// in JavaScript, object properties are accessed as ajax_object.ajax_url
wp_localize_script( 'ajax-script', 'ajax_object', array( 'ajax_url' => admin_url( 'admin-ajax.php' ) ) );
Second, in our javascript we can make the ajax call and define our ajax "action" and any other data we need in the data object. Because "action" has kind of a different meaning, I've renamed your action to "refresh_cart".
jQuery(document).ready(function($) {
$.ajax({
type: 'POST',
url : ajax_object.ajax_url,
cache: false,
data : { 'action': 'my_action', 'refresh_cart': 'yes' },
complete : function() { },
success: function(data) {
// $("#loading-img").hide();
alert(data);
// $("#join-class-div-3").html(data);
}
});
});
Third, we need to set up the callback for our ajax action. admin-ajax.php
looks through all of WordPress's pre-configured actions and then also looks for anything added to the wp_ajax_$my_action_name
on the back-end and wp_ajax_nopriv_$my_action_name
on the front-end. I am assuming your question concerns the front-end and since in the data
object we set action = my_action
the corresponding action hook would be wp_ajax_nopriv_my_action
... to which we have attached the my_action_callback
function. WordPress should be fully loaded and their shouldn't be an issue running shortcodes as far as I can tell.
add_action( 'wp_ajax_nopriv_my_action', 'my_action_callback' );
function my_action_callback() {
if( isset($_POST['refresh-cart']) && $_POST['refresh-cart'] == 'yes' ) {
echo do_shortcode('[woocommerce_cart]');
}
die();
}
And voila! I think that should do it, but I have to warn you that I didn't test any of this, so use with prudence.
Upvotes: 6