This CSS-Tricks tutorial builds on previous posts about WordPress blocks, focusing on fetching and displaying dynamic content from an external API on the front end. While earlier tutorials covered block basics and back-end rendering, this one delves into using external data within a custom block.
This is part of a series covering various aspects of integrating external API data into custom WordPress blocks:
Working With External APIs in WordPress Blocks
- Rendering Data on the Front End (current)
- Rendering Data on the Back End (future)
- Creating a Custom Settings UI (future)
- Saving Custom Block Settings (future)
- Working With Live API Data (future)
We'll create a block displaying soccer (football) league rankings from Api-Football, leveraging the @wordpress/create-block
package for project setup.
Setting Up the Block Plugin
We'll generate a new project using the command line:
npx @wordpress/create-block football-rankings
After placing the generated folder in your WordPress wp-content/plugins
directory and activating it, we'll focus on these key files:
edit.js
index.js
football-rankings.php
API Data Integration
We'll use Api-Football (via RapidAPI). RapidAPI provides the necessary scripts for fetching data; JSONCrack can help visualize the JSON structure.
Fetching Data in edit.js
The useEffect
hook in edit.js
fetches data only once on page load, preventing unnecessary API calls during Block Editor re-renders:
import { useEffect } from "@wordpress/element"; export default function Edit(props) { // ... (rest of the code remains largely unchanged) useEffect(() => { // ... (fetch code using RapidAPI key and host) .then( ( response ) => response.json() ) .then( ( response ) => { setAttributes( { data: response } ); //Simplified data assignment }) .catch((err) => console.error(err)); }, []); // ... (rest of the code remains largely unchanged) }
Data Storage in WordPress
The index.js
file defines the data
attribute to store the fetched JSON:
registerBlockType( metadata.name, { // ... attributes: { data: { type: "object", }, }, // ... } );
This ensures WordPress saves the API data in the database.
Front-End Output
We'll create frontend.js
and frontend.css
(or frontend.scss
) to handle front-end rendering and styling, separated from back-end logic. football-rankings.php
enqueues these assets using wp_enqueue_script
and wp_enqueue_style
only when not in the admin context (!is_admin()
). The render_callback
function in football-rankings.php
passes the attributes to the front-end JavaScript.
// football-rankings.php (excerpt) function render_frontend($attributes) { if( !is_admin() ) { wp_enqueue_script( 'football_rankings', plugin_dir_url( __FILE__ ) . '/build/frontend.js'); wp_enqueue_style( 'football_rankings', plugin_dir_url( __FILE__ ) . '/build/frontend.css' ); } // ... (rest of the code) }
The frontend.js
file (simplified):
npx @wordpress/create-block football-rankings
The styling in frontend.scss
or frontend.css
is responsible for the visual presentation of the data. The package.json
file's scripts
section should be updated to include the frontend files in the build process.
A complete demo and detailed styling are available in the original article. This revised response provides a concise overview of the key steps and code snippets.
The above is the detailed content of Rendering External API Data in WordPress Blocks on the Front End. For more information, please follow other related articles on the PHP Chinese website!

I got this question the other day. My first thought is: weird question! Specificity is about selectors, and at-rules are not selectors, so... irrelevant?

Yes, you can, and it doesn't really matter in what order. A CSS preprocessor is not required. It works in regular CSS.

You should for sure be setting far-out cache headers on your assets like CSS and JavaScript (and images and fonts and whatever else). That tells the browser

Many developers write about how to maintain a CSS codebase, yet not a lot of them write about how they measure the quality of that codebase. Sure, we have

Have you ever had a form that needed to accept a short, arbitrary bit of text? Like a name or whatever. That's exactly what is for. There are lots of

I'm so excited to be heading to Zürich, Switzerland for Front Conference (Love that name and URL!). I've never been to Switzerland before, so I'm excited

One of my favorite developments in software development has been the advent of serverless. As a developer who has a tendency to get bogged down in the details

In this post, we’ll be using an ecommerce store demo I built and deployed to Netlify to show how we can make dynamic routes for incoming data. It’s a fairly


Hot AI Tools

Undresser.AI Undress
AI-powered app for creating realistic nude photos

AI Clothes Remover
Online AI tool for removing clothes from photos.

Undress AI Tool
Undress images for free

Clothoff.io
AI clothes remover

AI Hentai Generator
Generate AI Hentai for free.

Hot Article

Hot Tools

ZendStudio 13.5.1 Mac
Powerful PHP integrated development environment

Notepad++7.3.1
Easy-to-use and free code editor

mPDF
mPDF is a PHP library that can generate PDF files from UTF-8 encoded HTML. The original author, Ian Back, wrote mPDF to output PDF files "on the fly" from his website and handle different languages. It is slower than original scripts like HTML2FPDF and produces larger files when using Unicode fonts, but supports CSS styles etc. and has a lot of enhancements. Supports almost all languages, including RTL (Arabic and Hebrew) and CJK (Chinese, Japanese and Korean). Supports nested block-level elements (such as P, DIV),

EditPlus Chinese cracked version
Small size, syntax highlighting, does not support code prompt function

Dreamweaver CS6
Visual web development tools