I have a wp-network installed with users that can create pages in each site.
Each of those pages get a place in the primary menu, and only one user have permission to create all this menu.
I want to create a user only to be able to edit the content of the pages, but not the title.
How can I disable the title of the page to be edited from the admin menu for a specific user, or (far better) for a capability?
I thought only a possibility, that’s editing admin css to hide the title textbox, but I have two problems:
- I don’t like to css-hide things.
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- I don’t know where is the admin css.
- I know php, but don’t know how to add a css hide to an element for a capability.
You should definitely use CSS to hide the div#titlediv. You’ll want the title to show in the markup so the form submission, validation, etc continues to operate smoothly.
Some elements you’ll need to know to implement this solution:
Here is a code snippet that will do the job, place it where you find fit, functions.php in your theme works. I’d put it inside a network activated plugin if you’re using different themes in your network:
I resolved the problem, just if someone comes here using a search engine, I post the solution.
Doing some research, I found the part of the code where the title textbox gets inserted, and I found a function to know if a user has a certain capability.
The file where the title textbox gets added is /wp-admin/edit-form-advanced.php. This is the line before the textbox
I changed it to this
That way, the textbox is only added when the user has the capability called “edit_title”
When this IF block ends few lines after, I added:
To see the page title but not to edit it, when the user hasn’t got “edit_title” capability.
Then I had already installed a plugin to edit user capabilities and roles, wich help me to create a new capability (edit_title) and assign it to the role I want.