This package is a collection of classes and utilities that can be used to efficiently load third-party libraries into your WordPress application.
It relies on the platform agnostic solution from Third Party Capital.
You can include this package in your WordPress project using Composer:
composer require googlechromelabs/wp-third-parties:^1.0
$ga = new Google_Chrome_Labs\WP_Third_Parties\Third_Parties\Google_Analytics(
array(
'id' => 'G-...', // Replace this with your actual Google Analytics ID.
)
);
// Add hooks to enqueue assets.
add_action( 'wp_loaded', array( $ga, 'add_hooks' ) );
See the Google Analytics JSON schema for the full list of supported arguments.
$gtm = new Google_Chrome_Labs\WP_Third_Parties\Third_Parties\Google_Tag_Manager(
array(
'id' => 'GTM-...', // Replace this with your actual Google Tag Manager ID.
)
);
// Add hooks to enqueue assets.
add_action( 'wp_loaded', array( $gtm, 'add_hooks' ) );
See the Google Tag Manager JSON schema for the full list of supported arguments.
$gme = new Google_Chrome_Labs\WP_Third_Parties\Third_Parties\Google_Maps_Embed(
array(
'mode' => '...', // Provide this and other parameters like 'key', 'q', 'center', etc.
)
);
// No assets need to be enqueued for a Google Maps Embed.
// To actually render the Google Maps Embed, use this.
echo $gme->get_html();
See the Google Maps Embed JSON schema for the full list of supported arguments.
$yte = new Google_Chrome_Labs\WP_Third_Parties\Third_Parties\YouTube_Embed(
array(
'videoid' => '...', // Replace this with your actual YouTube video ID.
)
);
// Add hooks to enqueue assets.
add_action( 'wp_loaded', array( $yte, 'add_hooks' ) );
// To actually render the YouTube Embed, use this.
echo $yte->get_html();
See the YouTube Embed JSON schema for the full list of supported arguments.