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Elgg 1.8 Social Networking

You're reading from   Elgg 1.8 Social Networking Create, customize, and deploy your very own social networking site with Elgg with this book and ebook

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2012
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849511308
Length 384 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Author (1):
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Cash Costello Cash Costello
Author Profile Icon Cash Costello
Cash Costello
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Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Elgg 1.8 Social Networking
Credits
Foreword
About the Author
About the Author of 1st edition
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Social Networking and Elgg FREE CHAPTER 2. Installing Elgg 3. A Tour of Your First Elgg Site 4. Sharing Content 5. Communities, Collaboration, and Conversation 6. Finding and Using Plugins 7. Creating Your First Plugin 8. Customization through Plugins 9. Theming Elgg 10. Moving to Production Developer's Quick Start Guide Views Catalog Index

Lesson 8: Changing how Elgg does X


This lesson covers using a plugin hook. It also explains how to add administrative settings.

Problem

Groups can have blogs, but only the person who writes the blog post can edit it. You prefer that group blogs work like the pages tool that allow for collaborative editing. Or maybe you would like to create customized notification messages that are sent to your users through e-mail. You also might want to include custom information when people search your site. The common theme here is that Elgg is doing one thing and you would like it to do it differently.

Solution

Use plugin hooks, which are very similar to events. When something occurs, a plugin hook is triggered and the functions that are registered for that plugin hook are called. The primary difference between events and plugin hooks is that plugin hook functions can return a changed result to the core. Take the 'validate, input' plugin hook as an illustrative example. When a user submits a new blog post...

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