I created custom post types & custom taxonomies for these.
Example: actors
(taxonomy) for movies
(post type).
Now I want to show up in my widget some terms and a more
link for the actors
terms archive.
How do I get the taxonomy archive link / url?
Use
get_term_link
e.g. to print out a list of actors terms linking to the archives:
However!
If what you really mean is the equivilant of the custom post type archive, that lists all the posts of that type, but for taxonomy terms, e.g. a page that acts as an archive listing the various taxonomy terms available, then you’re out of luck. There are no taxonomy archives in WordPress for terms, only posts assigned to a given term.
To produce a page listing the taxonomy terms you can use code similar to the above. Then put it in a page template and use that page as your taxonomy term archive.
The reason why is that the problem lies in the post loop, almost every single page template is intended to have one, and if you look at the template heirarchy, if the necessary templates aren’t found, it all goes back to index.php, and index.php has a post loop that displays posts, not a term loop. This and the many different ways and ideas of how terms should be listed means there is no consensus. What about date archives? Should there be an archive listing months and years? Timelines? Panels tiles clouds etc
There is no simple way to get this from scouring. And everyone who answers everywhere thinks you want to link to a TERM in the TAXONOMY… While you’re looking to get a link to the TAXONOMY archive… For which I have found absolutely nothing.
Basically, like many people, you want a
get_taxonomy_archive_link
method.Except, for one reason or another, it simply does not exist. I consider this a MAJOR failure on WordPress’s side.
There is no answer to your question. Not one that actually works within the WP framework as a proper solution. Sure, you can piece together
get_bloginfo()
for your needs, but there is absolutely no logical reason within WP thatget_taxonomy_archive_link
doesn’t exist.That all being said, I always add the following function to my themes:
it seems that you’re asking for a link to an archive with “all posts which has any term from the taxonomy Actors”.
everyone here replied as if you asked for the link to a specific term archive because what you’re asking doesn’t make sense in the wordpress world.
I am surprised by the answer of pixelbacon and the fact that it has 6 upvotes… That function returns an url which leads nowhere… wordpress doesn’t have a way to interpret that url nor to make the query which would have to be behind that request.
in the database a Taxonomy has relations with the terms, and the terms have relations with the posts. A single post doesn’t have relations with the taxonomy. The only thing that connect them is the fact that a post-type could support a Taxonomy.
Let’s write down in words what you’re trying to display in that page:
“Show me all the posts of the post_type ‘post’, which has ANY term from the taxonomy Actors.”
this basically translate to: “show me all posts of the post_type ‘post’ (which supports the taxonomy Actors)”.
Therefore the only difference from a general post_type archive (show all posts from a given post_type) would be IF you have posts which don’t have any Actor term assigned and you DO want to exclude them.
If that’s the case, then you can create a custom page, make a generic query to all posts, then in the loop you check if the post has any Actors term with
wp_get_post_terms(get_the_ID(), 'actors')
, and eventually exclude it if doesn’t have any.The archive link for any taxonomy follows this pattern:
For example, the category “news” on “myblogsite.com” would have the following archive URL:
So the “Harrison Ford” archive in your
actors
taxonomy would be:When you create your custom taxonomy, you can add attribute
rewrite
to it. This attribute could set rewrite slug for your taxonomy which you can use for link:So to create a link to create the taxonomy archive link you can use following pattern:
use get_term_link() 🙂
EDIT:
This may be of use: archive link for the taxonomy: get_the_term_list(). From the codex:
so it needs to be linked to a post ID, but does the job of archiving taxonomy terms.