I'm writing a plugin which would print a notice, but only on the media page. I found the admin_notices
and all_admin_notices
actions, but these are fired on all admin pages. Is there any way to find which admin page is the hook being called on from within the callback?
There is a global variable called $pagenow for the use within WP Admin:
global $pagenow;
if ( $pagenow == 'upload.php' ) :
function custom_admin_notice() {
echo '<div class="updated"><p>Updated!</p></div>';
}
add_action( 'admin_notices', 'custom_admin_notice' );
endif;
UPDATE: Simply include the snippet in your themes or plugins functions.php
-
How can I check if I am on admin page
admin.php?page=theme-prefix-theme-settings
? – lowtechsun Feb 14 '18 at 20:25 -
1
global $pagenow; if ( ( 'admin.php' === $pagenow ) && ( 'prefix-theme-settings' === $_GET['page'] ) ) { logic.. }
from this answer. – lowtechsun Feb 14 '18 at 20:58
An alternative way is using the load-{$page}
hook.
Example:
add_action('load-edit.php', 'maybe_edit_notice'); // only on edit.php paged
function maybe_edit_notice() {
// some example notices based on the get variables
// the url should be something htt://example.com/wp-admin/edit.php?done=1&error=1
if ( isset($_GET['done']) ) {
$message = isset($_GET['error']) ? 'There was an error.' : 'Everithing ok.';
$class = isset($_GET['error']) ? 'error' : 'updated';
global $my_notice_args;
$my_notice_args = compact('message', 'class');
add_action('admin_notices', 'print_my_notice');
}
}
function print_my_notice() {
global $my_notice_args;
if ( ! empty($my_notice_args) ) {
printf('<div class="%s"><p>%s</p></div>', $my_args_notice['class'], $my_args_notice['message']);
}
}
See 'admin_notices' hook docs on Codex