Macro Expander Wordpress Plugin - Rating, Reviews, Demo & Download
Plugin Description
You invoke a macro by typing a special command in your blog post:
[[keyword]]
Upon reading this command, the PHP function named “macro_keyword” is called and
its output is inserted on the page.
You can also pass a parameter to the macro:
[[keyword][param]]
Or multiple parameters:
[[keyword][param1][param2]]
The parameters are separated by the ][ characters, or rather, you can look at it
as a list of things in brackets surrounded by another pair of brackets.
The PHP file for this plugin has an example function that shows you how to write
macros. It is called “[[test]]” and is defined in the function “macro_test”. The
“test” macro takes up to two parameters, both optional.
New in 1.1: If you want to include the macros in RSS content, you will have to
define a second function named “macro_rss_keyword”. If this function is not
present, the macro will not be included in the RSS output.
Known Issues
-
This is a quick hack, not extensively tested but it seems to work for me.
-
WordPress already adds the
and
tags around the [[keyword]] before
the plugin is called — the plugin doesn’t remove those.
-
You can’t use ” and ‘ (and possibly a handful of other characters) in
parameters because WordPress replaces them with curly quotes before the
plugin has a chance to parse them. You can use spaces, though. -
Maybe pass an $is_rss parameter instead of using 2 separate functions?
-
Maybe change syntax to: ?!
About
-
Version 1.1 (8 June 2007) – The parameter separator is now ][ instead of |.
Added macro_rss_* functions for the RSS content. -
Version 1.0 (7 June 2007) – First version
Written by Matthijs Hollemans
http://www.hollemansproductions.com/wordpress-macro-expander-plugin.html
Screenshots
No screenshots provided