vote up 0 vote down star

Hi,

I am trying to add some dynamically (based on the URI) created class names into the standard body_class() statement.

The wordpress codex mentions to put the class into the brackets while using the body_class('add-class-here')

however I have 2 variables that I need to echo out inside the body class="" so I tried doing it as follows:

<?php
$url = explode('/', $_SERVER['REQUEST_URI']);
$dir = $url[2] ? $url[2] : 'home';
$subdir = $url[3] ? $url[3] : '';
?>

<body <?php body_class(<?=$dir?><?=($subdir?' ':'')?><?=$subdir?>); ?>>

This however results in a PHP error thus breaking the page.

I tried to add body_class($dir) and while it works, when adding the second variable $subdir it fails.

eg. body_class($dir($subdir?' ':'')$subdir) results in: Parse error: syntax error, unexpected T_VARIABLE

the ($subdir?' ':'') is only there to add a space between class names if $subdir is set.

Any ideas how I can add my variables into the body class while keeping the standard generated classes of the body_class() function?

Thanks for reading.

flag

1 Answer

vote up 1 vote down check
$path = (isset($subdir) && !empty($subdir)) 
  ? $dir . ' ' . $subdir 
  : $dir . $subdir;
body_class($path);
link|flag
Thanks, this somewhat works however if subdir is empty there is a trailing space inside the classes="" eg.: if $dir = class1 $subdir = class2 then class="class1 class2" but if $subdir = "" then class="class1 " I'd love to be able to just remove that trailing white space which is why I had originally added the if statement ($subdir?' ':'') so that only if $subdir is set a space gets inserted. Any idea how I can arrange for that? Thanks for the feedback! – Jannis Oct 4 at 17:59
@Jannis: This should fix it – code_burgar Oct 4 at 18:15
Thank you! It did indeed fix it. Thanks again. – Jannis Oct 4 at 18:34

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.