A demo plugin to serve as a boilerplate for developers to understand how to extend the GiveWP Donation plugin for WordPress.
- Clone this repository to your local
- Remove the
.gitdirectory - Run
php build.phpfrom the CLI - Run
composer installfrom the CLI - Run
npm installfrom the CLI - Update this README (see below for a starting point)
Note: We use @wordpress/scripts.
To compile your CSS & JS assets, run one of the following:
| Command | Description |
|---|---|
npm run dev |
Runs a one time build for development. No production files are created. |
npm run watch |
Automatically re-builds as changes are made. |
npm run build |
Builds the minified production files for release. |
GiveWP follows a domain-driven model both in core and in add-ons. Each business feature defines its own domain, including whatever it needs (settings, models, etc.) to do what it does. It's also important these domains are portable, that is, they are not bound to the plugin and could move to or from another plugin as needed.
For these reasons, each add-on has two primary directories for handling its logic:
- src/Addon
- src/Domain
The src directory handles business domain logic (i.e. a specific feature). The src directory should have no files in the root, but be a collection of folders. Each folder represents a distinct domain. Even if there is only one domain for the add-on, it should still live inside a domain directory.
It is possible for an add-on to have multiple domains, but it will always have at least one. Feel free to duplicate this directory and make more. This directory is just the starting point for the initial domain.
This unique domain directory is responsible for the fact that the add-on is a WordPress plugin. Plugins do things such as activate, upgrade, and uninstall — the logic of which should be handled there. All GiveWP add-ons also check for compatibility with GiveWP core, and this also is handled here.
The src/Addon directory may reference code in the src directory, but not the other way around.
No domain code should reference (and therefore depend on) the src/Addon directory. Doing this
keeps the dependency unidirectional.
If running npm run dev throws an error then check whether the images folder exists in your addon directory
under src/Addon/resources.
- If the
imagesfolder does not exist then create one. - If the
imagesfolder isn't required then remove the code fromwebpack.config.js.
DELETE ABOVE THIS LINE WHEN REWRITING README
[Write an introduction to what this addon is for]
- Clone this repository locally
- Run
composer installfrom the CLI - Run
npm installfrom the CLI
To compile your CSS & JS assets, run one of the following:
npm run dev— Compiles all assets for development one timenpm run watch— Compiles all assets for development one time and then watches for changes, supporting BrowserSyncnpm run hot— Compiles all assets for development one time and then watches for hot replacementnpm run dev— Compiles all assets for production one time