askupa-software/wp-dynamic-css

Render CSS using dynamic data from WordPress


Keywords
plugin, wordpress, dynamic css, dynamic style, amarkal, css, wordpress-framework
License
GPL-3.0

Documentation

WordPress Dynamic CSS License License License

A library for generating static stylesheets from dynamic content, to be used in WordPress themes and plugins.

Contributors: ykadosh
Tags: theme, mods, wordpress, dynamic, css, stylesheet
Tested up to: 4.7
Stable tag: 1.0.5
Requires: PHP 5.3.0 or newer
WordPress plugin: wordpress.org/plugins/wp-dynamic-css/
License: GPLv3 or later
License URI: http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-3.0.html

--

WordPress Dynamic CSS allows you to convert this:

body {
   background-color: $body_bg_color;
}

into this:

body {
   background-color: #fff;
}

Using dynamic user data.

Contents

Overview

WordPress Dynamic CSS is a lightweight library for generating CSS stylesheets from dynamic content (i.e. content that can be modified by the user). The most obvious use case for this library is for creating stylesheets based on Customizer options. Using the special dynamic CSS syntax you can write CSS rules with variables that will be replaced by static values using a custom callback function that you provide.
As of version 1.0.2 this library supports multiple callback functions, thus making it safe to use by multiple plugins/themes at the same time.

Basic Example

First, add this to your functions.php file:

// 1. Load the library (skip this if you are loading the library as a plugin)
require_once 'wp-dynamic-css/bootstrap.php';

// 2. Enqueue the stylesheet (using an absolute path, not a URL)
wp_dynamic_css_enqueue( 'my_dynamic_style', 'path/to/my-style.css' );

// 3. Set the callback function (used to convert variables to actual values)
function my_dynamic_css_callback( $var_name )
{
   return get_theme_mod($var_name);
}
wp_dynamic_css_set_callback( 'my_dynamic_style', 'my_dynamic_css_callback' );

// 4. Nope, only three steps

Then, create a file called my-style.css and write your (dynamic) CSS in it:

body {
   background-color: $body_bg_color;
}

In the above example, the stylesheet will be automatically compiled and printed to the <head> of the document. The value of $body_bg_color will be replaced by the value of get_theme_mod('body_bg_color').

Now, let's say that get_theme_mod('body_bg_color') returns the value #fff, then my-style.css will be compiled to:

body {
   background-color: #fff;
}

Simple, right?

Installation

Via Composer

If you are using the command line: $ composer require askupa-software/wp-dynamic-css:dev-master

Or simply add the following to your composer.json file:

"require": {
     "askupa-software/wp-dynamic-css": "dev-master"
 }

And run the command composer install

This will install the package in the directory wp-content/plugins. For custom install path, add this to your composer.json file:

"extra": {
     "installer-paths": {
         "vendor/askupa-software/{$name}": ["askupa-software/wp-dynamic-css"]
     }
 }

Via WordPress.org

Install and activate the plugin hosted on WordPress.org: wordpress.org/plugins/wp-dynamic-css/

When the plugin is activated, all the library files are automatically included so you don't need to manually include them.

Manually

Download the package from github and include bootstrap.php in your project:

require_once 'path/to/wp-dynamic-css/bootstrap.php';

Dynamic CSS Syntax

This library allows you to use special CSS syntax that is similar to regular CSS syntax with added support for variables with the syntax $my_variable_name. Since these variables are replaced by values during run time (when the page loads), files that are using this syntax are therefore called dynamic CSS files. Any variable in the dynamic CSS file is replaced by a value that is retrieved by a custom 'value callback' function.

A dynamic CSS file will look exactly like a regular CSS file, only with variables. For example:

body {
   background-color: $body_bg_color;
}

During run time, this file will be compiled into regular CSS by replacing all the variables to their corresponding values by calling the 'value callback' function and passing the variable name (without the $ sign) to that function.

Array variables (since 1.0.3)

Version 1.0.3 added support for array subscripts, using a syntax similar to that of PHP. For example:

body {
   font-family: $font['font-family'];
}

The callback function should accept a second variable that will hold an array of subscript names. A more in-depth explanation can be found in the Setting the Value Callback section.

Future releases may support a more compex syntax, so any suggestions are welcome. You can make a suggestion by creating an issue or submitting a pull request.

Piped filters (since 1.0.5)

Version 1.0.5 added support for piped filters. Filters can be registered using the function wp_dynamic_css_register_filter( $handle, $filter_name, $callback ) where $filter_name corresponds to the name fo the filter to be used in the stylesheet. For example, if a filter named myFilter was registered, it can be applied using the following syntax:

body {
   font-family: $myVar|myFilter;
}

Filters can also be stacked together:

body {
   font-family: $myVar|myFilter1|myFilter2;
}

And can even take additional parameters:

body {
   font-family: $myVar|myFilter1('1',2,3.4);
}

See Registering Filters to learn how to register filter callback functions.

Enqueueing Dynamic Stylesheets

To enqueue a dynamic CSS file, call the function wp_dynamic_css_enqueue and pass it a handle and the absolute path to your CSS file:

wp_dynamic_css_enqueue( 'my_dynamic_style', 'path/to/dynamic-style.css' );

This will print the contents of dynamic-style.css into the document <head> section after replacing all the variables to their values using the given callback function set by wp_dynamic_css_set_callback().

The first argument - the stylesheet handle - is used as an id for associating a callback function to it.

If multiple calls to wp_dynamic_css_enqueue() are made with different CSS files, then their contents will be appended to the same <style> section in the document <head>.

Loading the Compiled CSS as an External Stylesheet

Instead of printing the compiled CSS to the head of the document, you can alternatively load it as an external stylesheet by setting the second parameter to false:

wp_dynamic_css_enqueue( 'my_dynamic_style', 'path/to/dynamic-style.css', false );

This will reduce the loading time of your document since the call to the compiler will be made asynchronously as an http request. Additionally, styelsheets that are loaded externally can be cached by the browser, as opposed to stylesheets that are printed to the head.

The disadvantage of this approach is that the Customizer's live preview will not show the changes take effect without manually reloading the page.

Setting the Value Callback

The example given in the overview section uses the get_theme_mod() function to retrieve the value of the variables:

function my_dynamic_css_callback( $var_name )
{
   return get_theme_mod($var_name);
}
wp_dynamic_css_set_callback( 'my_dynamic_style', 'my_dynamic_css_callback' );

However, the get_theme_mod() function also takes a second argument, which is the default value to be used when the modification name does not exists (e.g. no changes were made in Customizer since the theme was activated).

In that case, we can tweak our callback function to return default values as well:

$theme_mod_defaults = array(
   'body_bg_color' => '#fff',
   'body_text_color' => 'black'
);

function my_dynamic_css_callback( $var_name )
{
   return get_theme_mod($var_name, @$theme_mod_defaults[$var_name]);
}
wp_dynamic_css_set_callback( 'my_dynamic_style', 'my_dynamic_css_callback' );

Your CSS file can look something like this:

body {
   background-color: $body_bg_color;
   color: $body_text_color;
}

Which will be compiled to this (provided that no changes were made by the user in Customizer):

body {
   background-color: #fff;
   color: black;
}

Array variables

It is also possible to access array values using subscripts. An example dynamic CSS file may look like:

body {
   background-color: $body_bg_color;
   color: $body_text_color;
   font: $font['font-size']px '$font['font-family']';
}

However, in this case the callback function is passed 2 parameters: one holding the variable name, and a second holding an array of subscript names. The second variable is always going to be an array since there may be more than one subscript (multidimensional arrays). To retrieve to array value, the subscripts array is to be looped through to get each subscript. For example:

$theme_mod_defaults = array(
   'body_bg_color' => '#fff',
   'body_text_color' => 'black'
   'font' => array(
      'font-familiy' => 'Arial',
      'font-size' => 14
   )
);

function my_dynamic_css_callback( $var_name, $subscripts = null )
{
   $val = get_theme_mod($var_name, @$theme_mod_defaults[$var_name]);
   if( null !== $subscripts )
   {
      foreach( $subscripts as $subscript )
      {
          $val = $val[$subscript];
      }
   }
   return $val;
}
wp_dynamic_css_set_callback( 'my_dynamic_style', 'my_dynamic_css_callback' );

which compiles to:

body {
   background-color: #fff;
   color: black;
   font: 14px 'Arial';
}

Registering Filters

Filters are functions the alter the value of the variables. Filters can be registered using the function wp_dynamic_css_register_filter( $handle, $filter_name, $callback ). A registered filter can only be used within the stylesheet whose handle is given. A filter callback function takes the value of the variable as a parameter and should return the filtered value. For example:

function my_filter_callback( $value ) 
{
   return trim( $value );
}
wp_dynamic_css_register_filter( 'my_dynamic_style', 'myFilter', 'my_filter_callback' );

The filter can then be applied using the | operator. For example:

body {
   font-family: $myVar|myFilter;
}

Filters can also take additional arguments. For example:

function my_filter_callback( $value, $arg1, $arg2 ) 
{
   return $value.$arg1.$arg2;
}
wp_dynamic_css_register_filter( 'my_dynamic_style', 'myFilter', 'my_filter_callback' );

To pass addidional arguments, use braces () and separate each argument with a comma (no spaces are allowd). For example:

body {
   font-family: $myVar|myFilter(',arial',',sans-serif');
}

Accepted argument types are strings, integers, floats and boolean values. Strings must have single quotes around them. For exmaple:

body {
   font-family: $myVar|myFilter(1,2,3,'4',5.6,true,false);
}

API Reference

wp_dynamic_css_enqueue

Enqueue a dynamic stylesheet

function wp_dynamic_css_enqueue( $handle, $path, $print = true, $minify = false, $cache = false )

This function will either print the compiled version of the stylesheet to the document's section, or load it as an external stylesheet if $print is set to false. If $cache is set to true, a compiled version of the stylesheet will be stored in the database as soon as it is first compiled. The compiled version will be served thereafter until wp_dynamic_css_clear_cache() is called.

Parameters

  • $handle (string) The stylesheet's name/id
  • $path (string) The absolute path to the dynamic CSS file
  • $print (boolean) Whether to print the compiled CSS to the document head, or load it as an external CSS file via an http request
  • $minify (boolean) Whether to minify the CSS output
  • $cache (boolean) Whether to store the compiled version of this stylesheet in cache to avoid compilation on every page load.

wp_dynamic_css_set_callback

Set the value retrieval callback function

function wp_dynamic_css_set_callback( $handle, $callback )

Set a callback function that will be used to convert variables to actual values. The registered function will be used when the dynamic CSS file that is associated with the name in $handle is compiled. The callback function is passed the name of the variable as its first parameter (without the $), and the variable subscripts as its second parameter (if applicable). The callback function should return the variable's actual value.

Parameters

  • $handle (string) The name of the stylesheet to be associated with this callback function.
  • $callback (callable) The value retrieval callback function.

wp_dynamic_css_clear_cache

Clear the cached compiled CSS for the given handle.

function wp_dynamic_css_clear_cache( $handle )

Registered dynamic stylesheets that have the $cache flag set to true are compiled only once and then stored in cache. Subsequesnt requests are served statically from cache until wp_dynamic_css_clear_cache() is called and clears it, forcing the compiler to recompile the CSS.

Parameters

  • $handle (string) The name of the stylesheet to be cleared from cache.

wp_dynamic_css_register_filter

Register a filter function for a given stylesheet handle.

function wp_dynamic_css_register_filter( $handle, $filter_name, $callback )

A registered filter can be used to alter the value of a variable by using the | operator in the stylesheet. The callback function is passed the variable's value as its first argument, and any additional arguments thereafter.

Parameters

  • $handle (string) The handle of the stylesheet in which this filter is to be used.
  • $filter_name (string) The name of the filter to be used in the dynamic CSS file.
  • $callback (callable) The actual filter function. Accepts the variable's value as the first argument. Should return the filtered value.