locate template returns the name of the template file, IIRC either in the theme or child-theme. It works by the basename of the template. Take care with the PHP syntax, the code as you've pasted it in here won't work, it's syntactically broekn already.
just go with include. when you got that working, you can consider to change it to theme based templates.
it will still work with include, just the template file is placed in the theme
@AlexGray that is with display errors, but better is to log as well and follow the log. display errors is fine for development, but sometines the errors are hidden / eaten in the HTML so it's not always working well.
<?php
//[player]
function player_embed_func( $atts ){
include "audio_player.html";
include "js/main.js";
include "js/jquery.js";
}
add_shortcode( 'player', 'player_embed_func')
?>
am I misunderstanding how the include looks for path?
@AlexGray you could but it's done automatically. the way you include in chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/29731619#29731619 is not working btw. because it will output the contents of these files to stdout (that is going to the browser, view source there), which is not what you want at that place.
you want the browser to request the .js files and includes them in the frontend program.
can't find what is default user and pass for Redis Is "redis://:@localhost:6379" valid connection string for redis? (if user and pass are empty strings by default)
seems like using includes path could take some time. Seems better to be as specific as you can so the program doesnt waste time looking, even though it's probably still really fast
are relative vs absolute paths what I need to look into to make the plugin universal? so it knows a certain file to look in regardless of the rest of the users paths?
@AlexGray within the frontend (that is inside the HTML), wordpress normally makes use of absolute URIs. For the include on the PHP side however you normally use (but must not) relative paths (not URLs !). There is also a constant in wordpress that gives you the path where you have the wordpress directory on the server, so you can also create absolute paths instead of relative ones.
@Baldráni I'm not a Mac OSX user, so don't ask with that much detail. But I normally understand it the way, that if you find an error, you own it. It's you taking care or someone other. But if you don't take care but complain that nobody else does, you've missed a point ;)
@bwoebi You can't make it consistent to normal compound assignment operators anyway. That would at least make it consistent to a) other languages and b) would keep the behavior consistent within the language
I.e. not do fetches on different levels depending on where exactly it becomes null / non-existent
I'm executing a SQL query that I know will always return 1 row. That row will always have one value and that value will always be 0 or 1. If any of these statements is false then something that is (or should be) impossible has occurred. Should I still explicitly handle each theoretic failure condition and throw detailed exception messages or just throw one exception that says unsupported behaviour has occurred?