Sometimes web designers need to access a page class suffix from directly within a template. A common reason to do this is to assign unique styles to individual pages linked from a menu (e.g. to change the dominant color on that page). By default Joomla applies the page class suffixes only to limited areas of a page, which often doesn't offer enough flexibility. However, by making some simple changes to your template you can take advantage of the cascading nature of stylesheets to apply unique styles to any element on a page.
First, we need to find out what the page class suffix is for the page we are visiting. To do this, you will need add some code to your template:
To load the page class suffix associated with the current Itemid, add this to the top of the index.php file:
<?php $itemid = JRequest::getVar('Itemid'); $menu = &JSite::getMenu(); $active = $menu->getItem($itemid); $params = $menu->getParams( $active->id ); $pageclass = $params->get( 'pageclass_sfx' ); ?>
To load the page class suffix associated with the active menu item, add this to the top of the index.php file: (For sub-pages with no active menu item, this will load the page class suffix for the default menu item.)
<?php $menus = &JSite::getMenu(); $menu = $menus->getActive(); $pageclass = ""; if (is_object( $menu )) : $params = new JParameter( $menu->params ); $pageclass = $params->get( 'pageclass_sfx' ); endif; ?>
(credit: Page Class Suffix in template code)
The above code will throw an exception in 2.5 and higher. Code below works:
<?php $app = JFactory::getApplication(); $menu = $app->getMenu()->getActive(); $pageclass = ''; if (is_object($menu)) $pageclass = $menu->params->get('pageclass_sfx'); ?>
You should always use htmlspecialchars() in your code before writing something into an HTML attribute, else you open up an attack vector to inject script code into your page.
The next step is to use the page class suffix somewhere in the template.
The more common method would be to apply the page class suffix as an id or class to the <body> tag. Find the <body> tag (below the </head> tag) and replace it with this:
<body id="<?php echo $pageclass ? htmlspecialchars($pageclass) : 'default'; ?>">The second method would be to load a stylesheet unique to the page in question. Instead of modifying the <body> tag, look for the stylesheet link within the <head></head> tags and add the following line directly beneath it:
<link rel="stylesheet" href="templates/<?php echo $this->template ?>/css/<?php echo htmlspecialchars($pageclass) ?>.css" type="text/css"/>
Using this approach to implement page class suffixes rather than the default approach has several benefits: