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Unified Meta Box Order

by Brian Dombrowski

0 Ratings

Active Installations

10+

Last Update

6 years

Quality

D

Plugin Description

Description
Intuitively harmonize meta box positions and screen column layout for all backend users of your WordPress installation.
Credit: This plugin is derived from the abandoned Global Meta Box Order plugin with hopes to be more stable and better support new versions of WordPress.
Quick Overview
Install and activate the plugin
Switch to a post, a page, a custom post type, or the dashboard
Change the order and position of a meta box (or all of them)
Change the column layout
Switch to a different user (maybe with the help of the User Switching plugin)
See your changes applied
Installation
Download and unpack, then move the folder ‘global-meta-box-order’ into your ‘plugins’ folder. Head over to your WordPress installation and activate the plugin in the admin area.
Rollback
The plugin doesn’t write anything to the database, it just reads. So it never touches any user settings, but instead filters them on a per request basis. Though all applied changes appear to be permanent from a user’s perspective, they are not. Just deactivate the plugin and see all changes disappear. Activate it again, and they will all be reapplied.
How It Works
The plugin operates on a blueprint user whose screen settings for meta boxes (visibility, position and ordering), and column layout are cloned for all other backend users on the fly.
By default, this blueprint user is the first admin user found, so you’ll need to be logged in as that user to globally change screen settings. For how to change the default blueprint user as well as other settings, please refer to the Configuration section below.
Where It Works
By default, the plugin kicks in when a user:
edits a post
edits a page
edits a custom post type
hits the dashboard
What It Changes
It will always change
the meta boxes visibility, ordering, and column positions
the column layout
When told so, it will also
remove the screen options box
immobilize all boxes, so they can’t be moved around by your users anymore
Usage
Log in as your blueprint user. By default, the is the first admin user found in your system.
Select an editing screen (post, page, custom post type) or the dashboard, move the meta boxes around, change their screen settings and the screen’s column layout. Switch to some user to review your settings, switch back to adjust them.
When done, you might want to lock your views down by removing the screen options box and by locking the boxes’ sort order. Your blueprint user, of course, wil not be affected by this.
Configuration
The backend integration is kept to a minimum. No navigation entry, no options page, no entry in the database. Instead, the place to go to configure the plugin is your theme’s functions.php.
By the way: You don’t need to configure the plugin. As long as it finds an admin user, it will work just fine.
Preparation
Fire up an editor, load your functions.php, and copy and paste the following code into it. The idea is to have some sort of container to do the configuration in, but do it any way you like.
For brevity, we’ll assume the plugin is loaded and active, so we won’t check for that (see this nice write-up on QueryLoop on some ways to do it, though).
if (is_admin()) {

// The path to the configuation is rather long, so let’s
// make us a shorthand.
class_alias(‘GlobalMetaBoxOrderConfig’, ‘MetaBoxConfig’);

// Add MetaBoxConfig below this line

}
Now we are ready to add some of the configuration settings below to adjust the plugin’s default behaviour. You might also want to have a look at the example configuration near the end of this document.
Please keep in mind that you need to be logged in as any user but your blueprint user to see a setting applied. Again, the User Switching plugin might come in handy.
Screens To Operate On
By default, the plugin operates on the post, page, and custom post type editing screens, and the dashboard.
You can change this as follows:
// Operate on post and page screens only, leave the dashboard alone.
// This will still include custom post types.
MetaBoxConfig::$filter = array(‘post’, ‘page’);

// Exclude custom post types
MetaBoxConfig::$include_cpts = false;

// Allow custom post types…
MetaBoxConfig::$include_cpts = true;

// …but not all of them
MetaBoxConfig::$exclude = array(‘acme_product’);
MetaBoxConfig in the example above is assumed to be an alias to GlobalMetaBoxOrderConfig as shown in the preparation section above.
Changing the Blueprint User
Register a function that returns a user id, like so:
MetaBoxConfig::$getBlueprintUserId = function () { return 1; };
Or, more involved:
MetaBoxConfig::$getBlueprintUserId = function () {

$user = get_user_by(‘slug’, ‘jane’);
return $user ? $user->ID : false;
};
MetaBoxConfig in the example above is assumed to be an alias to GlobalMetaBoxOrderConfig as shown in the preparation section above.
Locking Views
By default, all users will be able to interact with the screen options box, and to move around the meta boxes themselves. There is a rationale behind it, but to cut things short, this is how you might want to change it:
// No screen options
MetaBoxConfig::$remove_screen_options = true;

// Meta boxes can’t be moved anymore
MetaBoxConfig::$lock_meta_box_order = true;
MetaBoxConfig in the example above is assumed to be an alias to GlobalMetaBoxOrderConfig as shown in the preparation section above.
Example Configuration
if (is_admin()) {

// Make sure plugin is active
if (class_exists(‘GlobalMetaBoxOrderConfig’)) {

// Make a long name short.
class_alias(‘GlobalMetaBoxOrderConfig’, ‘MetaBoxConfig’);

// Settings

MetaBoxConfig::$filter = array(‘post’, ‘page’, ‘dashboard’); // default
MetaBoxConfig::$include_cpts = true; // default
MetaBoxConfig::$getBlueprintUserId = function () { return 1; };
MetaBoxConfig::$exclude = array(‘acme_product’);
MetaBoxConfig::$remove_screen_options = true;
MetaBoxConfig::$lock_meta_box_order = true;
}
}
On Moving the WYSIWYG Editor
The position of WordPress’ WYSIWYG editor is fixed, and can’t be changed out of the box (mostly because it lacks a box around it). There are reasons for this, but if you want to have a positionable editor anyway, you might want to have a look at our very own Movable Editor plugin.
If, on the other hand, if you want to place one specific box above the editor, you might want to check out this answer on stackexchange.
Support
If you have any issues with this plugin feel free to reach out to the maintainer, bdombro@gmail.com.

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