$page→saved()
Called right after this Page is saved
Note that if the $name argument is populated then only that field/property was saved.
This is different from the Pages::saved hookable method, which is only called
when the entire page is saved.
Example
$wire->addHook('Page:saved', function($e) {
$page = $e->object;
$changes = $e->arguments(0);
$name = $e->arguments(1);
if($name) {
$e->message("Saved field $name on page $page");
} else {
$e->message("Saved page $page: " . implode(', ', $changes));
}
});Usage
// basic usage
$page->saved(array $changes);
// usage with all arguments
$page->saved(array $changes, $name = false);Arguments
| Name | Type(s) | Description |
|---|---|---|
$changes | array | Names of changed field names and/or properties |
$name (optional) | string false | Indicates whether entire page was saved or just a field:
|
Hooking $page→saved(…)
You can add your own hook events that are executed either before or after the $page method is executed. Examples of both are included below. A good place for hook code such as this is in your /site/ready.php file.
Hooking before
The 'before' hooks are called immediately before each $page method call is executed. This type of hook is especially useful for modifying arguments before they are sent to the method.
$this->addHookBefore('Page::saved', function(HookEvent $event) {
// Get the object the event occurred on, if needed
$page = $event->object;
// Get values of arguments sent to hook (and optionally modify them)
$changes = $event->arguments(0);
$name = $event->arguments(1);
/* Your code here, perhaps modifying arguments */
// Populate back arguments (if you have modified them)
$event->arguments(0, $changes);
$event->arguments(1, $name);
});Hooking after
The 'after' hooks are called immediately after each $page method call is executed. This type of hook is especially useful for modifying the value that was returned by the method call.
$this->addHookAfter('Page::saved', function(HookEvent $event) {
// Get the object the event occurred on, if needed
$page = $event->object;
// An 'after' hook can retrieve and/or modify the return value
$return = $event->return;
// Get values of arguments sent to hook (if needed)
$changes = $event->arguments(0);
$name = $event->arguments(1);
/* Your code here, perhaps modifying the return value */
// Populate back return value, if you have modified it
$event->return = $return;
});API reference based on ProcessWire core version 3.0.252