Horje
Uploading by logged-in users of sets of image files and associated data. Administrators design the upload form, and download the images and data.

Noted That:

  • To install correctly this entrywizard.zip.
  • Fisrt Download the entrywizard.zip to your computer
  • Extract/Open entrywizard.zip to Your Computer.
  • Then, Find readme.txt file inside entrywizard.zip and Open readme.txt.
  • Now, Read the Requirements of this plugin. Which Wordpress Version and PHP Version are required to run this Plugin in Your Wordpress Site.
  • Then, Follow the the Tips Below.

Start the Tips:

1. First Download "entrywizard.zip" Plugin to your Local Computer. (Click Download)

2. Then, Login to your "yourdomain.com/wp-admin" Dashboard.

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3. Then, Click on "Plugins" + "Add New" from left sidemenu of Dashboard.

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4. Now, Click on "Upload Plugin" button.

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5. Now, Browse "entrywizard.zip" Downloaded plugin from your computer, Where you downloaded entrywizard.zip According to Step – 1 Above then, click on "Install Now"

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6. Now, Click on "Active Plugin"

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7. Then, See left sidemenu. "EntryWizard" folder is added on left sidemenu. Now, Click on "EntryWizard" folder.

   Noted that: If you do not see "EntryWizard" folder on left sidemenu then, see at left sidemenu "Settings" or "Tools".

8. Now you configure yourself oR Watch video tutorial below about EntryWizard Configurtions and Settings or How to work "EntryWizard" in your WordPress site.

 

oR

After Activated Plugin According to Step-6 then,

  1. Go to "Plugins" + "Installed Plugin" from Wordpress Admin Panel Leftside Menu.
  2. or Direct go to: https://yourdomain/wp-admin/plugins.php
  3. Then, Find "EntryWizard" Activated Plugin from Plugin List.
  4. Then, Click on "Settings" from Plugin that is EntryWizard
  5. Now, Edit/Add/Config the setting and Click on "Save Changes" button,
WP Plugin Setting



Guide
  • Either

    • Go to Plugins -> Install New and search for EntryWizard. Click “Install Now”.
      Or
    • Download and unzip the file into your plugins folder.
  • In the administration area, go to Plugins, look for “EntryWizard”, and click “activate”.

  • The “EntryWizard” links should appear on the administration sidebar.

  • Use With Caching Plugins: Caching plugins may need to be configured so they do not cache EntryWizard data. For example, if you are using the “DB Cache Reloaded Fix” plugin, you need to add “EWZ_|ewz_” to the cache filter (where it says “Do not cache queries that contains this input contents”). If you don’t do this, users will not get immediate feedback when they upload, but will have to wait for the cache to expire.

Usage

  • The initial setup comes with two sample layouts and one sample webform. The sample webform has been assigned the identifier “example”.
    To show the sample webform on your page, simply include the shortcode

    [ewz_show_webform identifier=”example”]

    in the page or post where you wish the form to appear.

  • Quickstart for the impatient:

    1. In the EntryWizard->Layouts admin page, click “Add a new layout” with options copied from the sample.

    2. Give it a new title and save it.

    3. In the EntryWizard->Webforms admin page, click “Add a new Webform”. In the new webform:
      * give it a name and an identifier
      * select your newly-created layout
      * click “Open for Uploads”
      * save the webform

    4. Create a new test page, containing
      [ewz_show_webform identifier=”xxx”]
      where xxx is the identifier you just created for your new webform.

    5. Now you can experiment, changing the settings for your own layout and webform and checking the effect by reloading your test page. If it turns out badly, delete that layout and start over with a fresh copy of the sample one. Once you have a layout that makes a good starting point for you, you may delete the sample ones.

  • If you are using a plugin such as Cimy User Extra Fields, or S2Member, and wish your spreadsheet to contain some of the extra member information they create, edit the file “ewz-extra.txt”. Save the result as “ewz-extra.php” in your plugins folder, and activate the new ‘EWZ_EXTRA’ plugin that it creates. ( Do not make any changes to ewz-custom-data.php ). Your code will then not be overwritten by subsequent upgrades to EntryWizard.

  • Most items in the EntryWizard admin pages have “help” icons beside them. Clicking one of these should pop up a window with more detailed information.

  • The “layout” governs the appearance of the form in the page. To change the layout of a form, go to the “webforms” page, open the relevant webform and select a different layout.

  • To change a layout, or create a new one, go to the “layouts” page. To save you the work of filling out all the details every time, new layouts are first created as copies of existing ones, to be modified as required. It is suggested that you keep the sample layouts for reference until you are comfortable with the software, and then modify the first one to be your “base” layout.

  • To open a new webform for upload, go to EntryWizard->Webforms in the WordPress Admin menu, click on the webform and check “open for uploads”. To open a closed webform for selected individuals only, click “Show user selection list”, and select the users. Then click “Save Changes”.

  • Logged-in users may now upload images by navigating to the page containing the “ewz_show_webform” shortcode.

  • Administrators may download images and/or spreadsheet by going to EntryWizard->Webforms in the WordPress Admin menu, clicking on the webform and selecting the preferred download option. Or clicking “Manage Items” takes you to a list of all the images, which you may view, delete, or attach to a page for display in a wordpress gallery.

  • EntryWizard saves the images in a special subfolder of the wordpress “uploads” folder. The image filenames are derived from the user’s original filenames in the following way:

    1. All characters except letters, digits, underscores, dashes, and all periods except the last, are replaced by ‘_’ ( In the Settings page you may change this to ‘-‘, ‘X’ or ‘x’). This ensures the filename is acceptable on most systems.
    2. If the base filename then ends with a digit, another ‘_’ is appended. This makes extra digits added by WordPress in the case of duplicate filenames more legible. It also ensures that no filename is totally numeric – WordPress handles files with completely numeric names differently in some cases.
      Administrators may, if required, add a prefix to this filename, or even generate it entirely from information stored on the server.

How one site makes use of EntryWizard and Ewz-Rating

* Image Upload

Images are uploaded using EntryWizard. If we are planning to print the images, they are required to have one dimension at least 2560 px, otherwise the images are required to fit within 1280×1024, which is (was when this was written!) an adequate size for both judging on most monitors and for projecting at meetings.

The layout contains a single-line text input for the title, a drop-down for the category, and usually a checkbox to be checked if a comment is requested. We get up to 200 images in a competition, so to save work for the judges a maximum of 2 out of the 4 allowed entries may ask for comments.

A prefix containing the user id and the webform identifier is set to be applied on upload. This ensures that all image files for the current year have unique names.

* Download and Preparation

Because the number of images is large, using the webform download sometimes times out. So the images are usually downloaded using ftp, and the webform download is only used for the spreadsheet itself.

If we are planning to print, the large versions of the images on the server are copied to another place. The downloaded copies are resized to 1280×1024 and re-uploaded to the upload folder, overwriting the originals. Otherwise, if we are not planning to print, the images are simply downloaded for eventual display at a club meeting.

The rating scheme is set up to show the judges the title and the category, with both using “append to previous column”. This helps keep the form narrow enough to display side-by-side with the image on a 1920×1200 monitor.

If there was a “comment requested” checkbox in the original upload, that field is divided among the judges. ( If there was no “comment requested” checkbox, a new “fixed text” field with the text “Comment Required” is created and divided among the judges. ) The comment input field ( which is a multi-line text input ) is then appended to this field, so “Comment Required” appears immediately above it if a comment is required. The effect of this is that on any image all judges may add a comment if they wish, and one judge is required to do so.

* Judging

Each judge is given a (temporary) user account on our website. We use a “Page Security & Membership” plugin to assign the judges to a group that has access to the page containing the relevant judging form, plus the public parts of our site, but not to the private sections.

After the main judging has taken place, if tie-breaking is required, a new page is created. For each set of tied images, an ewz-rating shortcode is added like this:
[ewz_rating view = “secondary” identifier=”sampleform” item_ids=”I1,I2,I3?], where I1,I2,I3 are the wordpress id’s of the tied images.
Any extra inputs required for tiebreaking are added to the rating scheme as “secondary”, so they do not display on the main judging page.

* Presentation

All scores and comments are downloaded to a spreadsheet. For presentation at a club meeting, this spreadsheet is used with Flexishow (https://sourceforge.net/projects/flexishow/) to drive a slideshow.

After the presentation, a new .csv file is generated from the spreadsheet and uploaded back to EntryWizard using the Webforms->Data Management->Upload Extra Per-Image Data. The “content” includes the scores and comments for the image.

A new page is created that is limited to logged-in members and contains a “[gallery]” shortcode. Using the Manage Items link on the webform, the images are “attached” to this page, with comments allowed. This creates an image gallery displaying all the images, with their scores and comments, to which logged-in members may add their own comments.

( The winning images are also displayed in a public gallery that is a little nicer-looking, using other software. )

* For Developers Only

There are two hooks you may wish to make use of:
1. ewz_after_upload, which runs on completion of a successful upload. Arguments passed are
webform_title, user_id, number of new items uploaded, number of existing items updated.
and
2. ewz_after_delete_item, which runs after each individual item deletion. Arguments are webform_title and user_id.

Here is some very basic example code:

function my_after_upload_function( $webform_title, $user_id, $created_count, $updated_count ){ $userdata = get_userdata( $user_id ); $email = $userdata->user_email; $name = $userdata->display_name; error_log("Uploaded to $webform_title by $name ( $email ), $created_count items created, $updated_count items updated");
}
add_action('ewz_after_upload', 'my_after_upload_function', 10, 4); ( See WordPress documentation for add_action for the meanings of the last two arguments )
function my_after_delete_function( $webform_title, $user_id ){ error_log("1 item Deleted from $webform_title: $user_id");
}
add_action('ewz_after_delete_item', 'my_after_delete_function', 10, 2 );

( Also, hooks ewz_before_delete_field, ewz_before_delete_item, ewz_before_delete_layout, ewz_before_delete_webform act are designed for use with Ewz_Rating. Changes to these may not always be documented. )


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Reffered: https://wordpress.org/

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