Kikito's answer above gets the trick done, but not in the most reusable way. In my view, the better approach is like this:
function display_element($element, &$children_elements, $max_depth, $depth=0, $args, &$output) {
// the first few lines of the method...
//display this element; handle either arrays or objects gracefully
if ( is_array( $args[0] ) )
$args[0]['has_children'] = ! empty( $children_elements[$element->$id_field] );
elseif ( is_object($args[0]) )
$args[0]->has_children = ! empty( $children_elements[$element->$id_field] );
// the rest of the method...
}
Overriding Walker::display_element()
is the right move, but it's better to actually address the problem at the root of the issue rather than simply tacking a class on at this point, for two reasons. First, the real problem isn't a missing class but rather the un-patched bug in WordPress that Kikito noted: the problem is that $args[0]
isn't always an array. That appears to be the typically expected type for Walker::display_element()
, but we're actually dealing here with Walker_Nav_Menu::display_element()
, and in that case args
ends up being passed in as a standard object type rather than an array type. As such, we simply need to add the has_children
element using object notation instead of array notation. Problem solved![1]
Adding that elseif
accounts for the ordinary Nav Menu case. This is the same form that will hopefully make it into the core class in this patch, at which point you'll no longer have to extend it. They should probably patch it further to account for the case that $args[0]
is neither an array nor an object, but I don't expect to see that happen.
Second, in order to keep good separation of concerns between the various methods, classes should really be added in the start_el()
method or elsewhere, since display_element()
isn't doing any of the class handling.
As a result, you can then override start_el()
however you like: you can add your own custom classes, or ignore elements entirely, or supply custom text, or whatever you like. (In my case, I'm working around an existing Javascript menu implementation that has very specific classing requirements based on parents and children, so I can't just add the same classes to everything that has a child – which is precisely why this separation of concerns matters.) In my code:
function start_el(&$output, $item, $depth = 0, $args = array(), $id = 0) {
$indent = ( $depth ) ? str_repeat( "\t", $depth ) : '';
$class_names = $value = '';
$classes = empty( $item->classes ) ? array() : (array) $item->classes;
$classes[] = 'menu-item-' . $item->ID;
$has_children = (is_object($args) && $args->has_children) || (is_array($args) && $args['has_children']);
if ($has_children) {
// do whatever you need to do
}
// everything else the method does...
}
[1] This is of course one of the potential pitfalls of dynamically typed languages like PHP... it's not a problem, as long as you're careful. The WordPress developers weren't careful here.