Tell us what you are trying to do?
I want to create a view which is a a heading and a table.
Heading: name of the parent post type
table: list all child relationships to that heading (parent post)
example:
Parent post type is jobs and child is Application. (one to many relationship)
Heading: Job A (parent)
Table: List of all Applications (child relationship to the heading)
hope this helps.
cheers
Hi, it sounds like something you can accomplish with two Views.
- Create a View of Applications. Add a Post Relationship Query Filter. If you cannot find the Query Filter panel, scroll to the top right corner and click "Screen Options" to activate the panel. Then you will add a post relationship filter, choose the Job / Application relationship, and set it up so the parent post is the current post in the loop.
- In the Loop Editor area of the View of Applications, use the Loop Wizard to create a table structure. You can choose different information to display about each Application, and the wizard will create the table for you.
- Next, create a View of Jobs. Do not add any Query Filters.
- In the Loop Editor area of the View of Jobs, choose an unformatted loop. Insert the post title or post link. Then use the Fields and Views button to insert the View of Applications inside the wpv-loop tags.
- Place the View of Jobs on your site in a custom page, or another post or template.
Let me know if you have questions about this approach.
https://toolset.com/documentation/post-relationships/how-to-display-related-posts-with-toolset/
https://toolset.com/documentation/user-guides/using-a-child-view-in-a-taxonomy-view-layout/
Hey Christian,
i didn´t get it running.
how do i set the parent post type in the loop and where do i have to put the parent view in the loop?
some pics attached.
Cheers
Hey Christian,
i have this working now. but few more question about filtering are coming up now.
Attached you will find a screenshot with the problems explained.
Thanks for your support.
I need to show only those posts where the current user is the author of the post.
Add a post author Query Filter to the View of Jobs.
Hide all posts in the loop where no relation is set.
Please share the code from the loop editor of both Views so I can see how you have this set up so far.
i have added a filter: "author is current user logged in user" but nothing is changing in the view.
Code of the job (parent) loop with queries ("author is current user logged in user" & relationship current post in the loop)
[wpv-layout-start]
[wpv-items-found]
<!-- wpv-loop-start -->
<wpv-loop>
[wpv-post-body view_template="loop-item-in-jobs-parent"]
</wpv-loop>
<!-- wpv-loop-end -->
[/wpv-items-found]
[wpv-no-items-found]
<strong>[wpml-string context="wpv-views"]No items found[/wpml-string]</strong>
[/wpv-no-items-found]
[wpv-layout-end]
code of the application (child) loop with no queries:
[wpv-layout-start]
[wpv-items-found]
<!-- wpv-loop-start -->
<table width="100%">
<thead>
<tr>
<th>[wpv-heading name="post-title"]Parent[/wpv-heading]</th>
<th>[wpv-heading name="post-title"]Child[/wpv-heading]</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody class="wpv-loop js-wpv-loop">
<wpv-loop>
<tr>
[wpv-post-body view_template="loop-item-in-bewerbung-child"]
</tr>
</wpv-loop>
</tbody>
</table>
<!-- wpv-loop-end -->
[/wpv-items-found]
[wpv-no-items-found]
<strong>[wpml-string context="wpv-views"]No items found[/wpml-string]</strong>
[/wpv-no-items-found]
[wpv-layout-end]
loop item application (child):
<td>[wpv-view name="jobs-parent"]</td>
<td>[wpv-post-title]</td>
thanks
Code of the job (parent) loop with queries ("author is current user logged in user" & relationship current post in the loop)
The View of Jobs should not have a post relationship filter. The post relationship filter should be applied to the View of Applications, because it is the child post View. The View of Jobs should only have a post author filter. If you also want to filter Applications by post author, you should add a Post Author Query Filter to the View of Applications.
[wpv-post-body view_template="loop-item-in-jobs-parent"]
I'm not able to see the contents of this template, but I assume it includes the shortcode to display your View of Applications. If I am correct, this looks good.
<td>[wpv-view name="jobs-parent"]</td>
<td>[wpv-post-title]</td>
This is from the Loop template in the View of Applications. It looks like you have included a 3rd View here - "jobs-parent". If you only want to display the parent post title, you can use the wpv-post-title shortcode instead of another View. When you use the Fields and Views button to insert the Post Title, the popup includes a tab called "Post Selection" in English, "Beitragsauswahl" in German. In this tab, you can select the parent Job post. See the attached screenshot.
If the results are not what you expect, I'll need to log in and take a look in your wp-admin area. Please let me know where I can see the View on the front-end of the site.
nope, does not work.
See my comment above:
https://toolset.com/forums/topic/table-with-child-posts/#post-1160900
- Place the View of Jobs on your site in a custom page, or another post or template.
You should place the parent View in your page, not the child View. I created a test page with the parent View and added some test content using the User profile you provided. Please log in using the same User profile and go to versteckter Link to see the View working. I am attaching a screenshot here.
Oh man... sometimes i do not see the little thinks in life 😉
Great, works perfect.
To have no "No items found" i have deleted the
[wpml-string context="wpv-views"]Not items found[/wpml-string] code
[wpv-layout-start]
[wpv-items-found]
<!-- wpv-loop-start -->
<table width="100%">
<thead>
<tr>
<th>[wpv-heading name="post-title"]Parent[/wpv-heading]</th>
<th>[wpv-heading name="post-title"]Child[/wpv-heading]</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody class="wpv-loop js-wpv-loop">
<wpv-loop>
<tr>
[wpv-post-body view_template="loop-item-in-bewerbung-child"]
</tr>
</wpv-loop>
</tbody>
</table>
<!-- wpv-loop-end -->
[/wpv-items-found]
[wpv-no-items-found]
[/wpv-no-items-found]
[wpv-layout-end]
Is this ok? because it does the job 😉 or do i break some other part with that?
Hey Christian,
damn i made a mistake. I have set up a wrong relationship. i choose a one (jobs) to many (applications) but it must be a many to many relation.
But with that i can´t select the jobs in many to many. (pic attached)
Could you guide me please?
To have no "No items found" i have deleted the
[wpml-string context="wpv-views"]Not items found[/wpml-string] code
Perfect, this is the correct way to remove the message "No items found".
But with that i can´t select the jobs in many to many. (pic attached)
Yes, because more than one Job can be related to the current Bewerbung. The proper way to include related Job information inside the View of Bewerbungs would be to use a View of related Jobs...but that doesn't really make sense for you. Instead, you should remove the Job title from the Bewerbung View and place it in the Job View.
Yes, because more than one Job can be related to the current Bewerbung. The proper way to include related Job information inside the View of Bewerbungs would be to use a View of related Jobs...but that doesn't really make sense for you. Instead, you should remove the Job title from the Bewerbung View and place it in the Job View.
Allright, did that but the application view does not show anything. i only the the job title from the job view.
hey christian,
got this going ?
just one quest left.
Now i see all my jobs with relations to applications and without.
I just want to see only the jobs which have an relation. is there a conditional i can use?
hey christian,
found this here:
https://toolset.com/forums/topic/hide-parent-view-if-child-view-is-empty/
but the problem is again the many to many relation because i can´t select the parent like in the topic mentioned.
Okay yes I see the problem. I have added the following custom code filter that will only return Jobs that have child Bewerbungs:
add_filter('wpv_filter_query', 'jobs_with_bewerbungs_func', 101, 3);
function jobs_with_bewerbungs_func($query, $view_settings, $view_id) {
$views = array( 870 );
$relationship_slug = 'job-bewerbung-multis';
if ( in_array( $view_id, $views ) ) {
$ids = array();
$jobs_args = array(
'post_type' => 'job',
'numberposts' => -1,
);
$jobs = get_posts( $jobs_args );
foreach($jobs as $job) {
$bewerbungs = toolset_get_related_posts(
$job->ID,
$relationship_slug,
'parent',
1000000,
0,
array(),
'post_id',
'child'
);
if( !is_array($bewerbungs) || count($bewerbungs) < 1 ) {
array_push( $ids, $job->ID );
}
}
$query['post__not_in'] = isset($query['post__not_in']) ? $query['post__not_in'] : array();
$query['post__not_in'] = array_merge($query['post__not_in'], $ids );
}
return $query;
}
You can find this code in Toolset > Settings > Custom Code. Please check the results on the front-end of the site and let me know if the list is not displaying as expected.