My situation:
I have several pages like home.php, about.php, gallery.php ...
In all these pages i include the menu with the anchors with php. so the menu is not in the pages. In all the pages i have the line: include('includes/menu.php');
What i want to achieve: if url is mydomain.com /gallery.php the anchor in the menu should have an extra class like "active" so i can style it different (current page is open).
I tried it with jquery:
I gave all the anchors a class "clickable" like below:
<ul class="main-menu">
<li><a class="clickable" href="index.php">Home</a></li>
<li><a class="clickable" href="gallery.php">Gallery</a></li>
<li><a class="clickable" href="openingtimes.php">Openingtimes</a></li>
</ul>
And load this jquery code:
$(document).ready(function()
{
$(function() { //run when the DOM is ready
$(".clickable").click(function() {
$(this).addClass("active"); //add the class to the clicked element
});
});
});
But the problem that appears: when click on the anchor, lets say gallery.php, it gets the class "active' shortly but the gallery.php is loading and the menu is again included via php. Ofcourse, this works only if you stay on the same page.
What can i do best with this situation to make an anchor active when the specific page is loaded?
Maybe read the url and then on basis of this url add a class to the anchor?
Use $_SERVER['PHP_SELF'] or $_SERVER['REQUEST_URI']
Try using:
<ul class="main-menu">
<li><a class="clickable <?php if($_SERVER['PHP_SELF'] == '/index.php') { echo "active"; } ?>" href="index.php">Home</a></li>
<li><a class="clickable <?php if($_SERVER['PHP_SELF'] == '/gallery.php') { echo "active"; } ?>" href="gallery.php">Gallery</a></li>
<li><a class="clickable <?php if($_SERVER['PHP_SELF'] == '/openingtimes.php') { echo "active"; } ?>" href="openingtimes.php">Openingtimes</a></li>
</ul>
Also make sure if the file is in another directory to add the name ex. if($_SERVER['PHP_SELF'] == '/folder/index.php')
Documentation: http://php.net/manual/en/reserved.variables.server.php
I am looping through some images of houses where all have a link to the house detail page. But i have one image that is in the that has a different link where it is being linked to the staff page.
Issue
How do i get that one link to go to the Staff detail page. I have tried to show different blocks of code depending on what class is inserted from the CMS? any suggestions?
<?php
$page_link = team;
if ( $page_link == {#page} ) {
?>
<a href="/team" class="{#remove_link} {#page}" >
<div class="project {#grey_scale} grid-item {#tile_size_width} {#tile_size_height}" style="background:url('{#image_1}{#video_image}');background-size: cover; background-position:center;">
</div>
</a>
<?php
} else {
?>
<a href="{#guid}" class="{#remove_link} {#page}" >
<div class="project {#grey_scale} grid-item {#tile_size_width} {#tile_size_height}" style="background:url('{#image_1}{#video_image}');background-size: cover; background-position:center;">
</div>
</a>
<?php
}
?>
First of all, you dont need to duplicate the whole HTML. You could just set the if around the <a> like:
<?php
$page_link = "team";
if ( $page_link == {#page} ) {
?>
<a href="/team" class="{#remove_link} {#page}" >
<?php } else { ?>
<a href="{#guid}" class="{#remove_link} {#page}" >
<?php } ?>
You need to know what is on {#page}. If it's "team", then you can do your if thing. If not, you have to adjust your $page_link to the same of your {#page} var.
If your team-page adress is something like stansmith.com/pages/team, then you have to change the <a href="/team"> to <a href="/pages/team">.
Please tell me if you need more help.
<ul class="nav nav-pills nav-stacked project-body" style="background-color: white">
<?php foreach($get_policies as $policies) : ?>
<li role="presentation" class="<?php echo $policies['policies_id'] == $policies_id ? "active" : "" ?>"><?php echo $policies['policies_title'] ?>
</li>
<?php endforeach; ?>
</ul>
i have the above code snippet, where i can display all the policies in vertically. Now i want the first policies should be loaded to the while loading the page. make the class active by default with policies loaded.
You can use nth-child for doing this
$('.project-body li:first-child').addClass('active');
You can use jquery to check if li have active class, get href then use window location.href:
if($('.project-body li').hasClass('active'))
{
window.location.href = $(this).attr('href');
}
In php way
Assuming your URL is
<?php echo base_url().'policies/index/'.$policies['policies_id'] ?>
When you click on the <li> link, to get the polilcies_id from the URL you can use $this->uri->segment(n); // n=1 for controller, n=2 for method, etc
for example
localhost/policies/index/4 where 4 is the policies_id, this->uri->segment(3)
<li role="presentation" class="<?php echo $policies['policies_id'] == this->uri->segment(3) ? "active" : "" ?>"> YOUR LINK </li>
At the moment I have a website with 5 pages and the main navigation is being displayed using an unordered list. What I'm trying to achieve is for the "active" page to be displayed first in the list.
For example, if I have a these pages: "Home | About | Contact | Blog". When you're on the contact page, this should move to the top of the list, so the menu would than look like this: "Contact | Home | About | Blog".
What's causing me problems is that the menu is being included through php, so there is just one menu for all the pages and through PHP I have made it so that it adds an "active" class to the current page menu item.
I am not really sure what the best solution for this would and would really appreciate any help.
Edit:
This is the navigation page that's being included into each page:
<nav class="large-nav">
<ul>
<li <?php echo ($activePage == 'ourStory') ? "class='active'" : ""; ?> >OUR STORY</li>
<li <?php echo ($activePage == 'services') ? "class='active'" : ""; ?> >SERVICES</li>
<li <?php echo ($activePage == 'projects') ? "class='active'" : ""; ?> >PROJECTS</li>
<li <?php echo ($activePage == 'contact') ? "class='active'" : ""; ?> >CONTACT</li>
<li <?php echo ($activePage == 'upload') ? "class='active'" : ""; ?> ><a style="margin-right: 0;" href="upload.php#top" title="">UPLOAD</a></li>
</ul>
</nav>
Here is a pure CSS way to do it using Flexbox ordering.
ul {
…
display: flex;
flex-direction: column;
}
li[class=active] {
order: -1;
…
}
Demo: http://codepen.io/antibland/pen/ZWjdqL
Support: IE10+, Firefox, Chrome
Jsfiddle link
jQuery:
$(function(){
$("li").on("click", function(){
$('ul').prepend($(this))
})
})
HTML
<ul>
<li>Home</li>
<li>Contact</li>
<li>About</li>
<li>Blog</li>
</ul>
You could do something like this :
$('.large-nav li').each(function() {
if($(this).find('a').attr('href') == location)
{
$('.large-nav ul').prepend($(this))
}
})
Hi I have a menu on my site on each page, I want to put it in it's own menu.php file but i'm not sure how to set the class="active" for whatever page i'm on.
Here is my code: please help me
menu.php:
<li class=" has-sub">
<a class="" href="javascript:;"><i class=" icon-time"></i> Zeiten<span class="arrow"></span></a>
<ul class="sub">
<li><a class="" href="offnungszeiten.php">Öffnungszeiten</a></li>
<li><a class="" href="sauna.php">Sauna</a></li>
<li><a class="" href="frauensauna.php">Frauensauna</a></li>
<li class=""><a class="" href="custom.php">Beauty Lounge</a></li>
<li><a class="" href="feiertage.php">Feiertage</a></li>
</ul>
</li>
this method gets the current page using php which will pass a word in this case active and places it inside the class parameter to set the page active.
<?php
function active($currect_page){
$url_array = explode('/', $_SERVER['REQUEST_URI']) ;
$url = end($url_array);
if($currect_page == $url){
echo 'active'; //class name in css
}
}
?>
<ul>
<li><a class="<?php active('page1.php');?>" href="http://localhost/page1.php">page1</a></li>
<li><a class="<?php active('page2.php');?>" href="http://localhost/page2.php">page2</a></li>
<li><a class="<?php active('page3.php');?>" href="http://localhost/page3.php">page3</a></li>
<li><a class="<?php active('page4.php');?>" href="http://localhost/page4.php">page4</a></li>
</ul>
It would be easier if you would build an array of pages in your script and passed it to the view file along with the currently active page:
//index.php or controller
$pages = array();
$pages["offnungszeiten.php"] = "Öffnungszeiten";
$pages["sauna.php"] = "Sauna";
$pages["frauensauna.php"] = "Frauensauna";
$pages["custom.php"] = "Beauty Lounge";
$pages["feiertage.php"] = "Feiertage";
$activePage = "offnungszeiten.php";
//menu.php
<?php foreach($pages as $url=>$title):?>
<li>
<a <?php if($url === $activePage):?>class="active"<?php endif;?> href="<?php echo $url;?>">
<?php echo $title;?>
</a>
</li>
<?php endforeach;?>
With a templating engine like Smarty your menu.php would look even nicer:
//menu.php
{foreach $pages as $url=>$title}
<li>
<a {if $url === $activePage}class="active"{/if} href="{$url}">
{$title}
</a>
</li>
{/foreach}
Create a variable in each of your php file like :
$activePage = "sauna"; (different for each page)
then check that variable in your html page like this
<?php if ($activePage =="sauna") {?>
class="active" <?php } ?>
Put all the below code in menu.php and everything will be taken care of.
// function to get the current page name
function PageName() {
return substr($_SERVER["SCRIPT_NAME"],strrpos($_SERVER["SCRIPT_NAME"],"/")+1);
}
$current_page = PageName();
Use the above to get the current page name then put this in your menu
<li><a class="<?php echo $current_page == 'offnungszeiten.php' ? 'active':NULL ?>" href="offnungszeiten.php">Öffnungszeiten</a></li>
<li><a class="<?php echo $current_page == 'sauna.php' ? 'active':NULL ?>" href="sauna.php">Sauna</a></li>
<li><a class="<?php echo $current_page == 'frauensauna.php' ? 'active':NULL ?>" href="frauensauna.php">Frauensauna</a></li>
<li><a class="<?php echo $current_page == 'custom.php' ? 'active':NULL ?>" href="custom.php">Beauty Lounge</a></li>
<li><a class="<?php echo $current_page == 'feiertage.php' ? 'active':NULL ?>" href="feiertage.php">Feiertage</a></li>
where active is the name of the class which will highlight your menu item
there is two things you can do.
first you can read the current filename of the php file you request by using $_SERVER['PHP_SELF'] or $_SERVER['REQUEST_URI'] or any other $_SERVER global variables that you can use to read your current page and compare it with the link's url, something like this
<a href="offnungszeiten.php" <?php if($_SERVER['PHP_SELF']=='offnungszeiten.php'){ ?>class="activatepage" <?php } ?> >
Öffnungszeiten
</a>
the second one is to create a variable that you can read globally that would store the current name of the current page, like this
<?php
$cur_page ="offnungszeiten"
?>
<a href="offnungszeiten.php" <?php if($cur_page=='offnungszeiten'){ ?>class="activatepage" <?php } ?> >
Öffnungszeiten
</a>
I have done it with php in this way,
function createTopNav($active)
{
$pages = array(
array(
'name'=>'Home',
'link'=>'index'
),
array(
'name'=>'Smartphone',
'link'=>'smartphone'
),
array(
'name'=>'Tablet',
'link'=>'tablet'
),
array(
'name'=>'About Us',
'link'=>'about'
),
array(
'name'=>'Contact Us',
'link'=>'contact'
)
);
$res = "<ul>";
$activePage = "";
foreach($pages as $key=>$val)
{
if($val['link']==$active)
{
$res.= "<li><a href='".$val['link']."' class='active' >".$val['name']."</a></li>";
}
else
{
$res.= "<li><a href='".$val['link']."'>".$val['name']."</a></li>";
}
}
$res.="</ul>";
return $res;
}
And then to call this function
echo createTopNav("about");
and the output will be like this
<ul>
<li>Home</li>
<li>Smartphone</li>
<li>Tablet</li>
<li>About Us</li>
<li>Contact Us</li>
</ul>
I solved this using jQuery/javascript by running the code below each time my any page is loaded:
$(document).ready(function () {
//Get CurrentUrl variable by combining origin with pathname, this ensures that any url appendings (e.g. ?RecordId=100) are removed from the URL
var CurrentUrl = window.location.origin+window.location.pathname;
//Check which menu item is 'active' and adjust apply 'active' class so the item gets highlighted in the menu
//Loop over each <a> element of the NavMenu container
$('#NavMenu a').each(function(Key,Value)
{
//Check if the current url
if(Value['href'] === CurrentUrl)
{
//We have a match, add the 'active' class to the parent item (li element).
$(Value).parent().addClass('active');
}
});
});
This implementation assumes your menu has the 'NavMenu' ID, and uses http://hostname/scriptname.php href attributes like so:
<ul id="NavMenu">
<li>Home</li>
<li>Smartphone</li>
<li>Tablet</li>
<li>About Us</li>
<li>Contact Us</li>
</ul>
Read the javascript comments to see what's going on. If you prefer to use a different href layout (like in your original example), you have to play with the CurrentUrl variable a bit to get it to use the same layout as your href attributes.
For me this was the easiest solution since I had an existing sites with a big menu and many pages, and wanted to avoid having to modify all pages. This allows me to throw in a piece javascript code in the header file (which was a central file already) which solves the problem for all existing pages.
A bit late on the ball, but I just had to solve this myself and ended up using this Javascript method, with a small modification. This has the advantage on not requiring many changes to the current code, just run the script and voila.
window.onload = activateCurrentLink;
function activateCurrentLink(){
var a = document.getElementsByTagName("A");
for(var i=0;i<a.length;i++)
if(a[i].href == window.location.href.split("#")[0])
a[i].className = 'activelink';
}
Send page name in query string and check it on every page by getting the variable.
Simplere solution:
Borrowing the code from asprin above;
Create a new file menu.php where you will store the one and only copy of the menu. In this file, you will create a function addMenu($pageName) that take a parameter as the page name and returns a string consisting of the menu after having added the current tag.
In your HTML code, you would include(menu.php) and then call the function addMenu with the current page name. So your code will look like this:
menu.php
<?php
function addMenu($pageName){
$menu =
'<ul>
<li><a href="Öffnungszeiten.php"' . ($pageName == "Öffnungszeiten" ? "class=\"current\"" : "") . '><span>Öffnungszeiten</span></a></li>
<li><a href="sauna.php"' . ($pageName == "Öffnungszeiten" ? "class=\"current\"" : "") . '><span>Sauna</span></a></li>
<li><a href="frauensauna.php"' . ($pageName == "Frauensauna" ? "class=\"current\"" : "") . '><span>Frauensauna</span></a></li>
<li><a href="custom.php" ' . ($pageName == "lounge" ? "class=\"current\"" : "") . '><span>Beauty Lounge</span></a></li>
<li><a href="Feiertage.php"' . ($pageName == "feiertage" ? "class=\"current\"" : "") . '><span>Feiertage</span></a></li>
</ul>';
return $menu;
}
?>
And in your HTML, say this:
<div id="menu">
<?php
include('menu.php');
echo addMenu("index");
echo $hello;
?>
</div>
This worked for me:
function active_page($script){
$actual = basename($_SERVER['PHP_SELF']);
if($script == $actual){
return 'active-page'; //class name in css
}
}
I have some simple example, see below:
<?php
function active($currect_page) {
$url = $_SERVER['REQUEST_URI'];
if($currect_page == $url){
echo 'active';
}
}
?>
<ul class="navbar-nav mr-auto">
<li class="nav-item <?php active('/');?>">
<a class="nav-link" href="/">Home</a>
</li>
<li class="nav-item <?php active('/other');?>">
<a class="nav-link" href="/other">Other page</a>
</li>
</ul>
Better late than never - I like to keep it simple, to be honest, especially if there's a ton of scripting and PHP going on.
I place this code on the top of each page to identify the page:
<?php
$current_page = 'home';
include 'header.php';
?>
Then your menu/navigation (mine is bootstrap 4) looks like this:
<ul class="navbar-nav mx-auto">
<li class="nav-item <?php if ($current_page=="home") {echo "active"; }?>">
<a class="nav-link" href="<?php echo SITEURL;?>/">Home</a>
</li>
<li class="nav-item <?php if ($current_page=="about") {echo "active"; }?>">
About
</li>
<li class="nav-item <?php if ($current_page=="store") {echo "active"; }?>">
Store
</li>
<li class="nav-item <?php if ($current_page=="news") {echo "active"; }?>">
News
</li>
<li class="nav-item <?php if ($current_page=="contact") {echo "active"; }?>">
Contact
</li>
</ul>
I'm not saying this is the optimal method, but it works for me and it's simple to implement.
adding this:<?= ($activePage == 'home') ? 'active':''; ?> to my link it works perfectly, I only can't make the child of a submenu working to make the parent active.
Assume you have a navbar with the following items:
<ul>
<li id="menu-item-home">HOME</li>
<li id="menu-item-services">SERVICES</li>
<li id="menu-item-about-us">ABOUT US</li>
<li id="menu-item-contact">CONTACT</li>
</ul>
Then, declare a javascript variable in each page as below:
<script>
<?php echo("var active = 'menu-item-home';"); ?>
</script>
The variable "active" is assigned with the corresponding item of each page.
Now, you can use this variable to highlight the active menu item as below.
$(window).ready(function(){$("#" + active).addClass("active");});
I have a similar issue with my web app menu.
I also have sub menus which do not appear as top level menu buttons.
My solution is as follows:
a) Partial php file with menu html and a little php function at the top that checks GET variables against the menu buttons.
I have two GET variables to check: the page and (if necessary) the menu_button.
b) Adding any new php page with a href links to either menu pages or sub menu pages.
The variable "menu_button" is optional and can be used to link to submenu php files.
Of course the security concerning GET variables should be considered.
From my point of view, this solution has less effort than having to maintain an array of pages or links somewhere.
You just use a get variable "menu_button" where you pass the top level menu button that should be marked visually in any link which targets your php file.
Code examples:
Partial menu.php (has to be included in every php file):
<?php
function active($page_link){
$menu_button = $_GET("menu_button") ?: $_GET("page"); // sets the menu button either to the given top level menu or it defaults to the page itself
if($menu_button === $page_link) return "active";
}
?>
<div>
<a href="?page=one" class="<?= active('one') ?>"Link one</a>
Link two
</div>
Any php file with links to sub menu file:
<div>
Link one
Link to sub menu page "three" of menu "two"
</div>
Works for me. Hope someone else can use this.
For making a dynamic active menu link I follow this method.
first, In the menu link, I always use the full address:
//HTML CODE
<ul class="menu">
<li>
Home
</li>
<li>
About us
</li>
<li>
Contact
</li>
</ul>
//Javacript Code
const menus = document.querySelectorAll('.menu li a');
menus.forEach((menu) => {
const currentLocation = window.location.href;
if (currentLocation === window.origin) {
menus[0].classList.add('active');
} else if (menu.href === currentLocation) {
menu.classList.add('active');
} else {
return;
}
});
and then I will use vanilla javascript code to do the rest
You can use
<?php
function active($current_page){
$page = $_GET['p'];
if(isset($page) && $page == $current_page){
echo 'active'; //this is class name in css
}
}
?>
<ul>
<li><a class="<?php active('page1');?>" href="?p=page1">page1</a></li>
<li><a class="<?php active('page2');?>" href="?p=page2">page2</a></li>
<li><a class="<?php active('page3');?>" href="?p=page3">page3</a></li>
<li><a class="<?php active('page4');?>" href="?p=page4">page4</a></li>
</ul>