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Viewing 25 results - 3,651 through 3,675 (of 4,122 total)
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  • #60723
    Tom
    Participant

    Yup- just as I thought.. in members-loop.php find-

    <?php bp_the_site_member_last_active() ?>

    and change to-

    <?php echo bp_custom_get_member_list_xprofile_data('Gender') ?>

    Where “Gender” is the name of the profile field you wish to display.

    #60722
    Tom
    Participant

    Threads been quite helpful for me so far..

    I’m using Jet random members widget on the ‘members’ page and I’ve managed to get one of my profile fields to display there now, rather than a random field.

    Here’s what I done…

    In /directories/members/index.php find-

    <?php bp_the_site_member_random_profile_data() ?>

    and replace with-

    <?php echo bp_custom_get_member_list_xprofile_data('Gender') ?>

    where “Gender” is the name of the field you wish to display.

    Then in bp-custom.php (in your plugins folder), add this:

    //To add custom profile fiels to random members widget //
    function custom_xprofile( $field ) {
    echo bp_custom_get_member_list_xprofile_data( $field );
    }
    function bp_custom_get_member_list_xprofile_data( $field ) {
    global $site_members_template;
    return xprofile_get_field_data( $field, $site_members_template->member->id );
    }

    I’m working on a few other tweaks now to try adding this custom field to the actual member listing part of the page now and I imagine it will work in the same sort of way. I’ll keep you posted.

    #60617

    In reply to: Moderate members

    Tom
    Participant

    Seems that only fixed the admin panel problem.

    However it’s throwing up errors on the front end now.

    To be honest I think this plugin is maybe outdated.

    I’ll list here my site’s configuration, and what errors I’m getting in-case anyone fancies making this plugin work as it should.

    OK.. Groups and Blogs are disabled site-wide (Except for the main site blog).

    The setting “Allow new registrations” is set to “Only user account can be created.”

    And “Registration notification” set to “Yes”

    1st problem (As previously mentioned in this thread)… When I go to the admin panel and try to edit the options for the plugin, and hit save, it throws up the errors that I posted here:

    https://buddypress.org/forums/topic/moderate-members?replies=1#post-33514

    I managed to get rid of those errors by doing as mentioned here:

    https://buddypress.org/forums/topic/moderate-members?replies=1#post-33517

    However… it turns out that was not a fix for the plugin, so I reverted the file back to original state.

    OK, I couldn’t edit the emails that would be sent out due to those errors, but I could of worked around that (editing within the file itself)… so I continued to the next step, which was to try and create a new account, to see if the plugin actually done what it’s supposed to.

    After entering all my required fields, and hitting the submit button, I was taken to the upload avatar page. I was also shown the “Check your email address for your activation email” notice. Also, at the top of the page these errors appeared:

    Warning: implode() [function.implode]: Invalid arguments passed in /home2/puezq/public_html/mysite.com/v2/wp-content/plugins/bp-registration-options/bp-registration-options.php on line 639

    Warning: implode() [function.implode]: Invalid arguments passed in /home2/puezq/public_html/mysite.com/v2/wp-content/plugins/bp-registration-options/bp-registration-options.php on line 642

    Since I know only very little php, I had a look to see what those lines were in the plugin php file, but done nothing with them. Here are those lines:

    639 $bp_groups_str = implode(",", $bp_groups);

    642 $bp_blogs_str = implode(",", $bp_blogs);

    So I’m guessing these errors are showing because I have blogs and groups disabled on the site?

    However the plugin php file is full of terms relating to blogs and groups, so I saw no point just removing those lines from the file as other errors would appear from somewhere… surely?

    Anyway, to see what happened next- I then uploaded an avatar, successfully. The errors at the top of the page disappeared when it was uploaded.

    I then clicked on the activation link in the email I received, and logged into the site. I was able to EDIT my profile and browse the site pages normally, but not able to view member profiles, my own public profile, or even view the members search page.

    I then received an email saying there was a new member registration (to my admin email)… and the notice also appears in the admin panel saying there’s a user awaiting moderation.

    And that’s where Im at.

    Come to think of it, and after having read through this post several times now- It seems that the plugin’s actually working… with the exception of those errors that are flagging up in the admin panel (when editing the emails that will be sent out), and at the top of the front end page. Hopefully one of you guys can tell me how to get rid of those errors… or at least the ones on the front end. :-)

    This truly does sound like a fantastic plugin, but with non-existent support at the forum link in the README.txt file, I think it can only carry on living if one of you geniuses are willing to fix the bugs.

    Unless anyone knows of another plugin that will allow new member moderation? (I have searched, but couldnt find anything).

    Boone Gorges
    Keymaster

    As for your other question, here are a few places to start:

    1) Make a Gender field and a Enter the Competition field in Dashboard > BuddyPress > Profile Fields. Make sure they’re required on registration.

    2) If by “top nav menu” you mean the thing that floats across the top of the screen, you can add to it by creating a button inside of a php function, then using add_action to attach the function to the bp_adminbar_menus hook. See buddypress/bp-core/bp-core-adminbar.php to see how it works in the core code.

    3) Use a plugin like JJJ’s https://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/bp-member-filter/ to create the filters that will populate the pages that the “Men” and “Women” dropdowns will point to.

    #60533
    Paul Wong-Gibbs
    Keymaster

    Those pre-built fields were removed in BP 1.1 due to being buggy. Expect to see something like this coming back for 1.3.

    #60511

    @Mike Pratt

    I think from a development perspective, it was easier to avoid the WP profile entirely, since it’s far too limited in what you can do with it. Like you can’t (in the DB) easily tell the WP profile screen which dynamic field type to use for each dynamic field. Since BuddyPress took the direction of being entirely theme based, it made sense to make a whole new profile with a more direct apprach to setting the fields and getting/updating the data.

    For 1.3 there will be a more powerful xprofile system that makes for smarter fields.

    #60490
    Mike Pratt
    Participant

    seriously, @Peter, you give yourself too much credit.

    I would, however, be curious to know if there is a reason bp didn’t make use of the rudimentary profile fields already available through WP? If it was inadvertent, that’s fine, but if there was a deliberate reason, Id’ find that of interest.

    #60476

    The first way is for users that may have been registered before BuddyPress was installed. They can still login, post comments, and use the forums, but if they never edited their profile and set their display name(fullname), BuddyPress won’t find them.

    The second is if a user edits their profile from the WordPress side (firstname, lastname, nickname) without changing their BuddyPress display name. At that point the two will be out of sync.

    It’s possible to hook into the save profile action of WordPress and change the BuddyPress display name when the user changes their WordPress nickname, but some sites may want a combo of the firstname/lastname while others may want to use the nickname, and others still may not really even care or use either. From that perspective it makes sense to not have BuddyPress try to interfere too deeply with syncing profile fields that might not have a direct 1 to 1 relationship with each other.

    #60424
    vusis
    Participant

    This is great, the what i wanna do next is show certain tabs (profile groups) to different member levels.

    I saw there’s a function called profile_group_tabs. is there a way i can perhaps play around with this?

    #60412
    Bowe
    Participant

    @Mike: you are saying that from BP 1.2 you can display user info (xprofile fields) into member blogs? So you could create a widget on a blog which would display basic info from the author (BP avatar + xprofile fields_

    That would be great, but I’m not sure if that was what you meant to say!

    #60400
    Mike Pratt
    Participant

    @Andy I think the central issue is that WP and BP store member info separately. For the uninitiated, it means that comments on blogs on a BP sire will not show the same profile info as comments on forums, etc. b/c the blog gets it’s info from the Wp table. So if you go into my admin on my site, none of the info is filled out except email and username, altho there’s AIM, website, First Name etc. But none of that is made avail into a BP install. On my site, the blog comments say ” username” commented….. instead of “Display name” commented.

    Additionally, if WP has all those user fields, why are they not exposed to BP already? That’s what is being talked about. So I am writing functions to sync up that data.

    #60384
    peterverkooijen
    Participant

    As much as I agree that you want to keep it simple, the last thing I want to do is a. auto-generate usernames (you have to tell them and they have to remember – let them decide)

    They don’t in my site. They log in with email address. The only reason to still have an (autogenerated) username is because you need it for the URL.

    parse a field into various name fields (parsing is just begging for errors – too may what-ifs) … But look deeper: they then auto-generate a username. why? who knows … Additionally they auto-gen a drop down list of “display names” … So what’s the diff between me and FB?

    Also not much difference between me and FB. The difference between your solution and FB is what the user actually sees on the registration form. I don’t believe a new user will be all that interested in those extra choices.

    I hearby declare it off limits to refer to Andy’s decision not to include firsname/lastname ever again.

    It’s not up to you to decide what the limits of discussion are. You may get it, but until Andy/WP/Automattic gets it I’ll keep bringing it up. I like the features WP/WPMU/BP offers, there are really no alternatives for those, but they need to get central member management and the database structure up to standard.

    #60381
    Mike Pratt
    Participant

    As much as I agree that you want to keep it simple, the last thing I want to do is a. auto-generate usernames (you have to tell them and they have to remember – let them decide) or b. parse a field into various name fields (parsing is just begging for errors – too may what-ifs)

    FYI – Facebook has you do the same 4 fields you mention you are doing. Fine. But look deeper: they then auto-generate a username. why? who knows since you always login with an email address. Additionally they auto-gen a drop down list of “display names”

    So what’s the diff between me and FB? I let you pick your display name up front in addition to your username. Ideal no but better than the alternative…for me.

    Bottom line is: let’s keep this discussion to how to do our own work arounds. The core way of doing does not appear to be changing. Fine (we can always leave the BP-sphere) Instead, let’s make it work.

    I hearby declare it off limits to refer to Andy’s decision not to include firsname/lastname ever again. :-) We get it.

    #60377
    Mike Pratt
    Participant

    Why not do the following (as we have)

    1. Have 4 name fields in BP registration

    1. username

    2. 1st name

    3. last name

    4. display name (the bp required field)

    Make them all required. We describe “display name” to everyone as “how you want your name to be viewed throughout the site’ If we had a choice, we’d get rid of it and mash 1st and last names together for display purpose. On the other hand, we have also seen many users do the following:

    1. username -> jim1974

    2. James

    3. Smith

    4. Jim Smith

    Obviously, this allows for nicknames and with a little prodding, you get people entering nicer monikers than “ladiesman269”

    Now, with the (lame) fact that WP user table is actually different (not sure why it wasn’t co-opted for BP purposes) All you have to do is create a function that writes the xprofile field values for 1st and Last name over to the WP table, in addition to setting the “display name value accordingly.

    a thousand user later and no one has complained.

    #60357
    peterverkooijen
    Participant

    What does that plugin do? It has some vague requirements:

    Create three news fields that will be used by the plugins (ex. “Member name”, “Member firstname”,”Member bothnames”). I suggest “Member name” to be a required field.

    Fill the values of those fields for your profile (the datas for at least one user are needed to setup the plugin options)

    Where are you supposed to create those fields? xprofile? In addition to the existing fullname field? You can already do that without this plugin.

    wp_usermeta is nowhere in the plugin. That is the table WP uses to store firstname and lastname. Any solution in Buddypress should leverage wp_usermeta or at least synchronize with it imho. This plugin solves nothing.

    If you’ve got a repeatable case of BP changes not syncing to the WP profile, please create a bug ticket on https://trac.buddypress.org/.

    The problem Dan Butcher described looks like standard Buddypress behavior to me. It’s not a bug, it’s a feature, based in Andy Peatling’s design decision that firstname + lastname would cause international incidents.

    Below again my hack as I use it in my sites, minus creation + update of a fullname-derived username for user_login, user_nicename, user_url and integration with a mailing list script I use:

    function synchro_wp_usermeta($user_id, $password, $meta) {
    global $bp, $wpdb;

    $uid = get_userdata($user_id);
    $email = $uid->user_email;

    $fullname = $meta[field_1];
    $space = strpos( $fullname, ' ' );

    if ( false === $space ) {
    $firstname = $fullname;
    $lastname = '';
    } else {
    $firstname = substr( $fullname, 0, $space );
    $lastname = trim( substr( $fullname, $space, strlen($fullname) ) );
    }

    update_usermeta( $user_id, 'nickname', $fullname );
    update_usermeta( $user_id, 'first_name', $firstname );
    update_usermeta( $user_id, 'last_name', $lastname );

    $wpdb->query( $wpdb->prepare( "UPDATE {$wpdb->users} SET display_name = %s WHERE ID = %d", $fullname, $user_id ) );

    }
    add_action( 'wpmu_activate_user', 'synchro_wp_usermeta', 10, 3);

    I have this code in bp-custom.php or functions.php, not as a plugin. Adding a plugin header could have caused Dan Butcher’s error messages.

    BTW, I’m still looking for code to validate the fullname input for at least a two part name, so make a space required. I now get a lot of users only entering a first name. In that case the lastname field in wp_usermeta will stay empty.

    #60351
    lukabernardi
    Participant

    This seems like a solution that can fit only in certain cases.

    I would also like to filter-before-output …

    #60341
    Anton
    Participant

    Is it even possible to display “custom” xprofile fields in blog posts?

    #60292

    I know this is a little back from the dead, but I would go about this in a totally different way myself.

    I would use good old WordPress usermeta, and have three different registration screens. Giving users the ability to choose something will more often than not confuse them. If you give them a dedicated registration with only the options they need, that will yield better results.

    I have a post around here somewhere on how to assign usermeta values directly from registration. Then rather than trying to group users together, rather than wasting a profile field that you eventually have to hide or prevent users from changing, and rather than creating custom user role types, you can just check the meta and go. And if they upgrade their account, you just update the usermeta value.

    Custom user roles is a good idea too, but it comes with a little more work to make things cooperate the way you want to use them.

    #60290
    designodyssey
    Participant

    Also check out Role Scoper which now has good support for WPMU. I’m doing the same thing, but was hoping to use Role Scoper and BPContents to achieve the same.

    #60282
    Anton
    Participant

    This is where I got the idea from but it doesn’t seem to work:

    https://buddypress.org/forums/topic/displaying-profile-fields-in-blog-posts

    #60276
    peterverkooijen
    Participant

    We were discussing displaying single xprofile fields here.

    Someone gave me this function:

    function custom_xprofile( $field ) {
    echo bp_custom_get_member_list_xprofile_data( $field );
    }
    function bp_custom_get_member_list_xprofile_data( $field ) {
    global $site_members_template;
    return xprofile_get_field_data( $field, $site_members_template->member->id );
    }

    So you can use this in the members index.php:

    <p><?php custom_xprofile('Company') ?></p>

    But it only works in members_template. I’d like to have a function for xprofile fields that works anywhere…

    Haven’t had time to try variations on this one. Suggestions very welcome!

    @Anton Koekemoer, I’m pretty sure the key would be in replacing $site_members_template in the function, but I wouldn’t know with what.

    EDIT2: Here’s the thread where I originally got the function, from John James Jacoby.

    #60261
    Michael Eisenwasser
    Participant

    How did this turn out? What steps did you take to make it work?

    I am creating a site with a similar need. I will have 2 roles – employers and job seekers. I would like to display different fields for each role’s profile and also allow them to pick their role on signup. Any tips?

    #60168

    In reply to: BuddyPress Geo plugin

    In my opinion, the downfall of this plugin is that it uses JS to hide xprofile fields that store the lat and lon instead of just using user-meta. That and it just works a little strangely, and I couldn’t really figure out why I wasn’t comfortable with it.

    I’ve got a re-engineered version of this plugin I’m using for a client at the moment, and will probably give that code back to the devs of this plugin to be reused for later.

    #60128
    hugodouchet
    Participant

    Up! Anyone to help me? Thx ;)

    #60124
    kineda
    Participant

    Thanks. That clears things up. The only other problem I’ve encountered is after I deactivate the BuddyPress plugin and re-activate it, I’ll get the follow db errors:

    WordPress database error: [Duplicate key name ‘useritem’]

    ALTER TABLE wp_bp_notifications ADD KEY useritem (user_id, is_new)

    WordPress database error: [Table ‘wp_bp_activity’ already exists]

    RENAME TABLE wp_bp_activity_user_activity_cached TO wp_bp_activity

    WordPress database error: [Duplicate entry ‘1’ for key 1]

    INSERT INTO wp_bp_xprofile_groups VALUES ( 1, ‘Base’, ”, 0 );

    WordPress database error: [Duplicate entry ‘1’ for key 1]

    INSERT INTO wp_bp_xprofile_fields ( id, group_id, parent_id, type, name, is_required, can_delete ) VALUES ( 1, 1, 0, ‘textbox’, ‘Name’, 1, 0 );

Viewing 25 results - 3,651 through 3,675 (of 4,122 total)
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