1
|
You can easily embed the results of a view into other parts of your site;
|
2
|
either with code as a module, or in nodes or blocks as snippets. The
|
3
|
easiest way is to use the function <strong>views_embed_view()</strong>:
|
4
|
|
5
|
<code>/**
|
6
|
* Embed a view using a PHP snippet.
|
7
|
*
|
8
|
* This function is meant to be called from PHP snippets, should one wish to
|
9
|
* embed a view in a node or something. It's meant to provide the simplest
|
10
|
* solution and doesn't really offer a lot of options, but breaking the function
|
11
|
* apart is pretty easy, and this provides a worthwhile guide to doing so.
|
12
|
*
|
13
|
* @param $name
|
14
|
* The name of the view to embed.
|
15
|
* @param $display_id
|
16
|
* The display id to embed. If unsure, use 'default', as it will always be
|
17
|
* valid. But things like 'page' or 'block' should work here.
|
18
|
* @param ...
|
19
|
* Any additional parameters will be passed as arguments.
|
20
|
*/
|
21
|
function views_embed_view($name, $display_id = 'default') {
|
22
|
</code>
|
23
|
|
24
|
To figure out the id of a display, hover your mouse over the tab to select that display. Everything after the '#views-tab-' is the id of that display. This ID is guaranteed never to change unless you delete the display and create a new one.
|