The shortcode produced by this function – a list of all sites in a multisite – outputs above the content in the loop, no matter where it is placed in the editor.
I’ve looked at the other related questions and answers on WPSE and realize that it has to do with the function using echo
instead of return
, but it’s not as easy as replacing the instances of echo
with return
in the function below. Or adding echo=0
with a WP function like wp_list_pages()
Any ideas? Where is the function that needs to be returned instead of echoed?
// Output a single menu item
function projects_menu_entry($id, $title, $link_self)
{
global $blog_id;
if ($link_self || $id != $blog_id) {
echo '<li>';
if ($id == $blog_id) {
echo '<strong>';
}
$url = get_home_url($id);
if (substr($url, -1) != '/') {
// Note: I added a "/" to the end of the URL because WordPress
// wasn't doing that automatically in v3.0.4
$url .= '/';
}
echo '<a href="' . $url . '">' . $title . '</a>';
if ($id == $blog_id) {
echo '</strong>';
}
echo '</li>';
}
}
// Output the whole menu
// If $link_self is false, skip the current site - used to display the menu on the homepage
function projects_menu($link_self = true)
{
global $wpdb;
echo '<ul>';
projects_menu_entry(1, 'Home', $link_self);
$blogs = $wpdb->get_results("
SELECT blog_id
FROM {$wpdb->blogs}
WHERE site_id = '{$wpdb->siteid}'
AND spam = '0'
AND deleted = '0'
AND archived = '0'
AND blog_id != 1
");
$sites = array();
foreach ($blogs as $blog) {
$sites[$blog->blog_id] = get_blog_option($blog->blog_id, 'blogname');
}
natsort($sites);
foreach ($sites as $blog_id => $blog_title) {
projects_menu_entry($blog_id, $blog_title, $link_self);
}
echo '</ul>';
}
// Adds a [bloglist] shortcode
function bloglist_shortcode($atts)
{
projects_menu(false);
}
add_shortcode('bloglist', 'bloglist_shortcode');
All functions have to return a string, you should not use
echo
anywhere. Rewrite the functions, use an internal variable to handle the strings and return that:For a similar, extended example see: How to return loop contents.
You can’t replace the instances of
echo
because you can only return once. You need to build a string and return that.Do that for both functions and I would expect this to work. Apologies if I have grossly misread something.
I’m going to offer an alternative solution that does not require you to replace instances of echo or build a return string.
You can turn on output buffering and return the buffer as a string.
Add
ob_start()
to the beginning of the function before any echo call.at the end of the function add:
Short and quick answer:
You should
return
your output and notecho
it.