BuddyForms Hierarchical Posts

Hierarchical Posts Extension. Parent post = (Journal) child post = (log)

Author:ThemeKraft (profile at wordpress.org)
WordPress version required:3.9
WordPress version tested:5.7
Plugin version:1.1.6
Added to WordPress repository:07-07-2015
Last updated:23-01-2020
Warning! This plugin has not been updated in over 2 years. It may no longer be maintained or supported and may have compatibility issues when used with more recent versions of WordPress.
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Plugin URI:http://buddyforms.com/downloads/buddyforms-hi...
Total downloads:2 910
Active installs:30+
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Parent to child relationship

With Hierarchical Posts you can structure your user submissions in a user friendly way. It’s logic is all about parent to child relationships which means that a parent post can have multiple child posts.

WordPress can become unpleasant to write and read stories if they belong together in a hierarchical way. If you have multiple posts belonging together to one story usually you would create a category for this story and add new posts to this category to make them a part of it.

This is a nice system but can become confusing and user unfriendly if you need a much more advanced way to structure your posts. In many cases you need a more structured order within a category or between posts. With the plugin you are able to create one parent post and have its children listed above or underneath the content. The children can share the same or a different category.

WordPress inbuilt and fully supported in custom post types

WordPress has all functions in place to work nicely with child posts. They are used for pages and also menus (sub navigation). We have the ‘get_children’ function built in to gather all children posts off a parent post in one place. From there you can create custom post types. The only thing you need to do in the settings is setting ‘hierarchical’ to true which will enable the hierarchical functionalities.

All in all with the parent to child relationship you give your story related posts a closer binding and make them belonging together. Making the structure of posts visible makes it a lot easier for readers to understand the relationships between the posts.

Think of parent post as journal and the child post as log

Most off the time you don’t want to display the children in the posts list. You want to display the parents and then generate a view for the children log entries. With using the plugin both viewing types are possible: displaying them separately or grouped together.

Parent post single view

All child posts can be listed under or above the content of the parent post if displayed in the single view. If a user creates a new parent post one can add any type of content just like in normal posts describing the parent (journal). The child posts (log from the journal) can be listed under or above the content.

Multiple child forms

You can create different forms for the children and enable the user to select the form he likes to use for the child posts. If you only give one form as an option, this form will be used automatically.

Form element to the select the parent

If one is selecting the parent page: allow the user to select the parent post or change a child posts parent.

Deleting a parent post

If you delete a parent journal you delete all logs too. Deleting will move the posts into trash.

Watch the video to see the plugin in action:

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  • Pull request are welcome. BuddyForms is community driven and developed on Github

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Tags

hierarchical, hierarchical posts, hierarchical post, page, pages, custom post types, hierarchically, frontend posting, frontend editing, post relations, posts relations

Documentation & Support

Extensive Documentation and Support

All code is neat, clean and well documented (inline as well as in the documentation).

The BuddyForms documentation with many how-to’s is following now!

If you still get stuck somewhere, our support gets you back on the right track.
You can find all help buttons in your BuddyForms Settings Panel in your WP Dashboard!

Got ideas or just missing something?

If you still miss something, let us know any feedback is welcome!