2

I'd like to enqueue scripts only for an admin page that I've created.

There's an example of this here: http://codex.wordpress.org/Function_Reference/wp_enqueue_script#Load_scripts_only_on_plugin_pages

But it's not working for me, I think because I'm writing my plugin within a class. add_action only works with in the constructor??

Is there a way to add scripts to a specific page from within a class?

I came up with this method: My main plugin page is a list of custom post types (if you set 'show_in_menu' => 'custom_page_slug' in the post type args it takes over that page with a list of posts). When I created the post type, I set a variable up with the post type name:

$args = register_post_type('post-type', $args );
$this->posttype = $args->name;

Then this call in the constructor:

add_action( 'admin_print_scripts', array( &$this, 'scripts_init' ) );

And this in the scripts_init function:

global $current_screen;    
if( $current_screen->id == $this->posttype )
{
wp_enqueue_script( ... );
}

It works. But it seems more complicated than it needs to be. Is there a better way to accomplish this?

Thanks!

1 Answer 1

5

Instead of hooking into admin_print_scripts only, you should hook into your specific page slug which is appended to admin_print_scripts-. (note trailing hyphen). The reference page you linked to shows this, but you seem to be omitting the $page concatenation to admin_print_scripts-.

eg:

$page = add_theme_page( 'Options', 'Options', 'edit_theme_options', 'options-panel', 'topf_admin_options_markup' );

add_action( "admin_print_scripts-$page", 'enqueue_my_admin_scripts' );

I'm using the slug $page returned from add_theme_page; you should provide your own slug. Scripts will only be loaded for your specific page and there is no need to check within your enqueue function.

2
  • That's not working. The add_action has to be within the __construct to work. Even if I set up a class variable then try to access it: add_action( 'admin_print_scripts-'.$this->pagename, 'scripts_init' ), it doesn't work. Its like the variable is not set yet. Maybe it has something to do with the order in which the action hooks fire? Commented Jun 12, 2011 at 13:14
  • The add_action does not have to be in the __construct. It should be where ever you are creating your page. eg: class ControlPanel { function __construct() { add_action( 'admin_menu', array( &$this , 'my_admin_menu' )); } function my_admin_menu() { $page = add_theme_page('DTI Options', 'DTI Options', 'edit_theme_options', "diverge_theme_options", array( &$this , 'optionspage' )); add_action( "admin_print_scripts-$page", array( &$this , 'scripts_init' )); } }
    – Jeff
    Commented Jun 12, 2011 at 15:09

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