| ############# |
| Smiley Helper |
| ############# |
| |
| The Smiley Helper file contains functions that let you manage smileys |
| (emoticons). |
| |
| .. important:: The Smiley helper is DEPRECATED and should not be used. |
| It is currently only kept for backwards compatibility. |
| |
| .. contents:: |
| :local: |
| |
| .. raw:: html |
| |
| <div class="custom-index container"></div> |
| |
| Loading this Helper |
| =================== |
| |
| This helper is loaded using the following code:: |
| |
| $this->load->helper('smiley'); |
| |
| Overview |
| ======== |
| |
| The Smiley helper has a renderer that takes plain text smileys, like |
| :-) and turns them into a image representation, like |smile!| |
| |
| It also lets you display a set of smiley images that when clicked will |
| be inserted into a form field. For example, if you have a blog that |
| allows user commenting you can show the smileys next to the comment |
| form. Your users can click a desired smiley and with the help of some |
| JavaScript it will be placed into the form field. |
| |
| Clickable Smileys Tutorial |
| ========================== |
| |
| Here is an example demonstrating how you might create a set of clickable |
| smileys next to a form field. This example requires that you first |
| download and install the smiley images, then create a controller and the |
| View as described. |
| |
| .. important:: Before you begin, please `download the smiley images |
| <http://ellislab.com/asset/ci_download_files/smileys.zip>`_ |
| and put them in a publicly accessible place on your server. |
| This helper also assumes you have the smiley replacement array |
| located at `application/config/smileys.php` |
| |
| The Controller |
| -------------- |
| |
| In your **application/controllers/** directory, create a file called |
| Smileys.php and place the code below in it. |
| |
| .. important:: Change the URL in the :php:func:`get_clickable_smileys()` |
| function below so that it points to your smiley folder. |
| |
| You'll notice that in addition to the smiley helper, we are also using |
| the :doc:`Table Class <../libraries/table>`:: |
| |
| <?php |
| |
| class Smileys extends CI_Controller { |
| |
| public function index() |
| { |
| $this->load->helper('smiley'); |
| $this->load->library('table'); |
| |
| $image_array = get_clickable_smileys('http://example.com/images/smileys/', 'comments'); |
| $col_array = $this->table->make_columns($image_array, 8); |
| |
| $data['smiley_table'] = $this->table->generate($col_array); |
| $this->load->view('smiley_view', $data); |
| } |
| |
| } |
| |
| In your **application/views/** directory, create a file called **smiley_view.php** |
| and place this code in it:: |
| |
| <html> |
| <head> |
| <title>Smileys</title> |
| <?php echo smiley_js(); ?> |
| </head> |
| <body> |
| <form name="blog"> |
| <textarea name="comments" id="comments" cols="40" rows="4"></textarea> |
| </form> |
| <p>Click to insert a smiley!</p> |
| <?php echo $smiley_table; ?> </body> </html> |
| When you have created the above controller and view, load it by visiting http://www.example.com/index.php/smileys/ |
| </body> |
| </html> |
| |
| Field Aliases |
| ------------- |
| |
| When making changes to a view it can be inconvenient to have the field |
| id in the controller. To work around this, you can give your smiley |
| links a generic name that will be tied to a specific id in your view. |
| |
| :: |
| |
| $image_array = get_smiley_links("http://example.com/images/smileys/", "comment_textarea_alias"); |
| |
| To map the alias to the field id, pass them both into the |
| :func:`smiley_js()` function:: |
| |
| $image_array = smiley_js("comment_textarea_alias", "comments"); |
| |
| Available Functions |
| =================== |
| |
| .. php:function:: get_clickable_smileys($image_url[, $alias = ''[, $smileys = NULL]]) |
| |
| :param string $image_url: URL path to the smileys directory |
| :param string $alias: Field alias |
| :returns: An array of ready to use smileys |
| :rtype: array |
| |
| Returns an array containing your smiley images wrapped in a clickable |
| link. You must supply the URL to your smiley folder and a field id or |
| field alias. |
| |
| Example:: |
| |
| $image_array = get_clickable_smileys('http://example.com/images/smileys/', 'comment'); |
| |
| .. php:function:: smiley_js([$alias = ''[, $field_id = ''[, $inline = TRUE]]]) |
| |
| :param string $alias: Field alias |
| :param string $field_id: Field ID |
| :param bool $inline: Whether we're inserting an inline smiley |
| :returns: Smiley-enabling JavaScript code |
| :rtype: string |
| |
| Generates the JavaScript that allows the images to be clicked and |
| inserted into a form field. If you supplied an alias instead of an id |
| when generating your smiley links, you need to pass the alias and |
| corresponding form id into the function. This function is designed to be |
| placed into the <head> area of your web page. |
| |
| Example:: |
| |
| <?php echo smiley_js(); ?> |
| |
| .. php:function:: parse_smileys([$str = ''[, $image_url = ''[, $smileys = NULL]]]) |
| |
| :param string $str: Text containing smiley codes |
| :param string $image_url: URL path to the smileys directory |
| :param array $smileys: An array of smileys |
| :returns: Parsed smileys |
| :rtype: string |
| |
| Takes a string of text as input and replaces any contained plain text |
| smileys into the image equivalent. The first parameter must contain your |
| string, the second must contain the URL to your smiley folder |
| |
| Example:: |
| |
| $str = 'Here are some smileys: :-) ;-)'; |
| $str = parse_smileys($str, 'http://example.com/images/smileys/'); |
| echo $str; |
| |
| .. |smile!| image:: ../images/smile.gif |