Field::viewable() method

Is this field viewable?

  • To maximize efficiency check that $field->useRoles is true before calling this.
  • If you have already verified that the page is viewable, omit or specify null for $page argument.
  • Please note: this does not check that the provided $page itself is viewable. If you want that check, then use $page->viewable($field) instead.

Usage

// basic usage
$bool = $field->viewable();

// usage with all arguments
$bool = $field->viewable($page = null, $user = null);

Arguments

NameType(s)Description
page (optional)Page, null

Optionally specify a Page for context (i.e. Is field viewable on $page?)

user (optional)User, null

Optionally specify a different user for context (default=current user)

Return value

bool

True if viewable, false if not


Hooking $field->viewable(…)

You can add your own hook events that are executed either before or after the $field->viewable(…) 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 $field->viewable(…) method call is executed. This type of hook is especially useful for modifying arguments before they are sent to the method.

$this->addHookBefore('Field::viewable', function(HookEvent $event) {
  // Get the object the event occurred on, if needed
  $Field = $event->object;

  // Get values of arguments sent to hook (and optionally modify them)
  $page = $event->arguments(0);
  $user = $event->arguments(1);

  /* Your code here, perhaps modifying arguments */

  // Populate back arguments (if you have modified them)
  $event->arguments(0, $page);
  $event->arguments(1, $user);
});

Hooking after

The 'after' hooks are called immediately after each $field->viewable(…) method call is executed. This type of hook is especially useful for modifying the value that was returned by the method call.

$this->addHookAfter('Field::viewable', function(HookEvent $event) {
  // Get the object the event occurred on, if needed
  $Field = $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)
  $page = $event->arguments(0);
  $user = $event->arguments(1);

  /* Your code here, perhaps modifying the return value */

  // Populate back return value, if you have modified it
  $event->return = $return;
});

$field methods and properties

API reference based on ProcessWire core version 3.0.236

Latest news

  • ProcessWire Weekly #549
    In the 549th issue of ProcessWire Weekly we’re going to check out the latest core updates, highlight one older yet still very relevant third party module, and more. Read on!
    Weekly.pw / 17 November 2024
  • Custom Fields Module
    This week we look at a new ProFields module named Custom Fields. This module provides a way to rapidly build out ProcessWire fields that contain any number of subfields/properties within them.
    Blog / 30 August 2024
  • Subscribe to weekly ProcessWire news

“The end client and designer love the ease at which they can update the website. Training beyond how to log in wasn’t even necessary since ProcessWire’s default interface is straightforward.” —Jonathan Lahijani