Files
WooNooW/PROJECT_SOP.md
dwindown 4471cd600f feat: Complete markdown syntax refinement and variable protection
 New cleaner syntax implemented:
- [card:type] instead of [card type='type']
- [button:style](url)Text[/button] instead of [button url='...' style='...']
- Standard markdown images: ![alt](url)

 Variable protection from markdown parsing:
- Variables with underscores (e.g., {order_items_table}) now protected
- HTML comment placeholders prevent italic/bold parsing
- All variables render correctly in preview

 Button rendering fixes:
- Buttons work in Visual mode inside cards
- Buttons work in Preview mode
- Button clicks prevented in visual editor
- Proper styling for solid and outline buttons

 Backward compatibility:
- Old syntax still supported
- No breaking changes

 Bug fixes:
- Fixed order_item_table → order_items_table naming
- Fixed button regex to match across newlines
- Added button/image parsing to parseMarkdownBasics
- Prevented button clicks on .button and .button-outline classes

📚 Documentation:
- NEW_MARKDOWN_SYNTAX.md - Complete user guide
- MARKDOWN_SYNTAX_AND_VARIABLES.md - Technical analysis
2025-11-15 20:05:50 +07:00

40 KiB
Raw Blame History

🧭 WooNooW — Single Source of Truth (S.O.P.)

This document defines the Standard Operating Procedure for developing, maintaining, and collaborating on the WooNooW project — ensuring every AI Agent or human collaborator follows the same workflow and conventions.


1. 🎯 Project Intent

WooNooW modernizes WooCommerce without migration, delivering a Hybrid + SPA experience for both storefront and admin, while keeping compatibility with legacy WooCommerce addons.

Goal: “Reimagine WooCommerce for now — faster, modern, reversible.”


1.1 📝 Documentation Standards

Progress & Testing Documentation

All progress notes and reports MUST be added to:

  • PROGRESS_NOTE.md - Consolidated progress tracking with timestamps

All test checklists MUST be added to:

  • TESTING_CHECKLIST.md - Comprehensive testing requirements

Feature-specific documentation:

  • Create dedicated .md files for major features (e.g., PAYMENT_GATEWAY_INTEGRATION.md)
  • Link to these files from PROGRESS_NOTE.md
  • Include implementation details, code examples, and testing steps

Documentation Rules:

  1. Update PROGRESS_NOTE.md after completing any major feature
  2. Add test cases to TESTING_CHECKLIST.md before implementation
  3. Use consistent formatting (emojis, headings, code blocks)
  4. Include "Last synced" timestamp in GMT+7
  5. Reference file paths and line numbers for code changes

2. 🧱 Core Principles

  1. Zero Data Migration — All data remains in WooCommerces database schema.
  2. Safe Activation/Deactivation — Deactivating WooNooW restores vanilla Woo instantly.
  3. HPOS-First Architecture — Mandatory use of WooCommerce HPOS.
  4. Hybrid by Default — SSR + React SPA islands for Cart, Checkout, and MyAccount.
  5. Full SPA Option — Optional React-only mode for performance-critical sites.
  6. Compat Layer — HookBridge & SlotRenderer preserve legacy addon behavior.
  7. Async System — MailQueue & async actions replace blocking PHP tasks.

3. ⚙️ Tech Stack Reference

Layer Technology
Backend PHP 8.2+, WordPress, WooCommerce (HPOS), Action Scheduler
Frontend React 18 + TypeScript, Vite, React Query, Tailwind CSS + Shadcn UI, Recharts
Architecture Modular PSR4 autoload, RESTdriven logic, SPA hydration islands
Build Composer + NPM + ESM scripts
Packaging scripts/package-zip.mjs
Deployment LocalWP for dev, Coolify for staging

4. 🧩 Folder Structure

woonoow/
├─ woonoow.php              # main plugin file (WordPress entry)
├─ includes/                # PSR4 classes
│  ├─ Core/                 # Bootstrap, Datastores, Mail, Hooks
│  ├─ Api/                  # REST endpoints
│  ├─ Admin/                # Menus, asset loaders
│  ├─ Compat/               # Compatibility shims & hook mirrors
│  └─ …
├─ admin-spa/               # React admin interface
├─ customer-spa/            # React customer interface
├─ scripts/                 # automation scripts
│  └─ package-zip.mjs
├─ dist/                    # build output
├─ composer.json
├─ package.json
├─ README.md
└─ PROJECT_SOP.md           # this file

5. 🧰 Development Workflow

5.1 Environment Setup

  1. Use LocalWP or Docker (PHP 8.2+, MySQL 8, Redis optional).
  2. Clone or mount woonoow folder into /wp-content/plugins/.
  3. Ensure WooCommerce is installed and active.
  4. Activate WooNooW in wp-admin → “Plugins.”

5.2 Build & Test Commands

npm run build       # build both admin & customer SPAs
npm run pack        # create woonoow.zip for release
composer dump-autoload

5.3 Plugin Packaging

  • The release ZIP must contain only:
    woonoow.php
    includes/
    admin-spa/dist/
    customer-spa/dist/
    composer.json
    package.json
    phpcs.xml
    README.md
    
  • Build ZIP using:
    node scripts/package-zip.mjs
    

5.4 Commit Convention

Use conventional commits:

feat(api): add checkout quote endpoint
fix(core): prevent duplicate email send on async queue
refactor(admin): improve SPA routing

5.5 Branching

  • main — stable, production-ready
  • dev — development staging
  • feature/* — specific features or fixes

5.6 Admin SPA Template Pattern

The WooNooW Admin SPA follows a consistent layout structure ensuring a predictable UI across all routes:

Structure

Admin-SPA
├── App Bar [Branding | Version | Server Connectivity | Global Buttons (Fullscreen)]
├── Menu Bar (Main Menu) [Normal (Tabbed Overflow-X-Auto)] [Fullscreen (Sidebar)]
├── Submenu Bar (Tabbed Overflow-X-Auto, context-sensitive)
└── Page Template
    ├── Page Tool Bar (Page filters, CRUD buttons, Back button)
    └── Page Content (Data tables, cards, forms)

Behavioral Notes

  • App Bar: Persistent across all routes; contains global controls (fullscreen, server, user menu).
  • Menu Bar: Primary navigation for main sections (Dashboard, Orders, Products, etc.); sticky with overflow-x scroll.
  • Submenu Bar: Context-sensitive secondary tabs under the main menu.
  • Page Tool Bar: Contains functional filters and actions relevant to the current page.
  • Page Content: Hosts the page body—tables, analytics, and CRUD forms.
  • In Fullscreen mode, Menu Bar becomes a collapsible sidebar while all others remain visible.
  • Sticky layout rules ensure App Bar and Menu Bar remain fixed while content scrolls independently.

5.7 Mobile Responsiveness & UI Controls

WooNooW enforces a mobilefirst responsive standard across all SPA interfaces to ensure usability on small screens.

Control Sizing Standard (.ui-ctrl)

  • All interactive controls — input, select, button, and dropdown options — must include the .ui-ctrl class or equivalent utility for consistent sizing.
  • Default height: h-11 (mobile), md:h-9 (desktop).
  • This sizing improves tap area accessibility and maintains visual alignment between mobile and desktop.

Responsive Layout Rules

  • On mobile view, even in fullscreen mode, the layout uses Topbar navigation instead of Sidebar for better reachability.
  • The Sidebar layout is applied only in desktop fullscreen mode.
  • Sticky top layers (App Bar, Menu Bar) remain visible while subcontent scrolls independently.
  • Tables and grids must support horizontal scroll (overflow-x-auto) and collapse to cards when screen width < 640px.

Tokens & Global Styles

  • File: admin-spa/src/ui/tokens.css defines base CSS variables for control sizing.
  • File: admin-spa/src/index.css imports ./ui/tokens.css and applies the .ui-ctrl rules globally.

These rules ensure consistent UX across device classes while maintaining WooNooW's design hierarchy.

5.8 Dialog Behavior Pattern

WooNooW uses Radix UI Dialog with specific patterns for preventing accidental dismissal.

Core Principle: Prevent outside-click and escape-key dismissal for dialogs with unsaved changes or complex editing.

Dialog Types:

Type Outside Click Escape Key Use Case Example
Informational Allow Allow Simple info, confirmations Alert dialogs
Quick Edit Allow Allow Single field edits Rename, quick settings
Heavy Edit Prevent Prevent Multi-field forms, rich content Email builder, template editor
Destructive Prevent Prevent Delete confirmations with input Delete with confirmation text

Implementation:

// Heavy Edit Dialog - Prevent accidental dismissal
<Dialog open={isOpen} onOpenChange={setIsOpen}>
  <DialogContent
    onInteractOutside={(e) => e.preventDefault()}
    onEscapeKeyDown={(e) => e.preventDefault()}
  >
    {/* Dialog content */}
    <DialogFooter>
      <Button variant="outline" onClick={() => setIsOpen(false)}>
        {__('Cancel')}
      </Button>
      <Button onClick={handleSave}>
        {__('Save Changes')}
      </Button>
    </DialogFooter>
  </DialogContent>
</Dialog>

// Quick Edit Dialog - Allow dismissal
<Dialog open={isOpen} onOpenChange={setIsOpen}>
  <DialogContent>
    {/* Simple content */}
  </DialogContent>
</Dialog>

Rules:

  1. Prevent dismissal when:

    • Dialog contains unsaved form data
    • User is editing rich content (WYSIWYG, code editor)
    • Dialog has multiple steps or complex state
    • Action is destructive and requires confirmation
  2. Allow dismissal when:

    • Dialog is purely informational
    • Single field with auto-save
    • No data loss risk
    • Quick actions (view, select)
  3. Always provide explicit close buttons:

    • Cancel button to close without saving
    • Save button to commit changes
    • X button in header (Radix default)

Examples:

  • Prevent: admin-spa/src/components/EmailBuilder/EmailBuilder.tsx - Block edit dialog
  • Prevent: Template editor dialogs with rich content
  • Allow: Simple confirmation dialogs
  • Allow: View-only information dialogs

Best Practice:

When in doubt, prevent dismissal for editing dialogs. It's better to require explicit Cancel/Save than risk data loss.

Responsive Dialog/Drawer Pattern:

For settings pages and forms, use ResponsiveDialog component that automatically switches between Dialog (desktop) and Drawer (mobile):

import { ResponsiveDialog } from '@/components/ui/responsive-dialog';

<ResponsiveDialog
  open={isOpen}
  onOpenChange={setIsOpen}
  title={__('Edit Settings')}
  description={__('Configure your settings')}
  footer={
    <div className="flex gap-2">
      <Button variant="outline" onClick={() => setIsOpen(false)}>
        {__('Cancel')}
      </Button>
      <Button onClick={handleSave}>
        {__('Save')}
      </Button>
    </div>
  }
>
  {/* Form content */}
</ResponsiveDialog>

Behavior:

  • Desktop (≥768px): Shows centered Dialog
  • Mobile (<768px): Shows bottom Drawer for better reachability

Component: admin-spa/src/components/ui/responsive-dialog.tsx

5.9 Settings Page Layout Pattern

WooNooW enforces a consistent layout pattern for all settings pages to ensure predictable UX and maintainability.

Core Principle: All settings pages MUST use SettingsLayout component with contextual header.

Implementation Pattern:

import { SettingsLayout } from './components/SettingsLayout';

export default function MySettingsPage() {
  const [settings, setSettings] = useState({...});
  const [isLoading, setIsLoading] = useState(true);
  
  const handleSave = async () => {
    // Save logic
  };
  
  if (isLoading) {
    return (
      <SettingsLayout
        title={__('Page Title')}
        description={__('Page description')}
        isLoading={true}
      >
        <div className="animate-pulse h-64 bg-muted rounded-lg"></div>
      </SettingsLayout>
    );
  }
  
  return (
    <SettingsLayout
      title={__('Page Title')}
      description={__('Page description')}
      onSave={handleSave}
      saveLabel={__('Save Changes')}
    >
      {/* Settings content - automatically boxed with max-w-5xl */}
      <SettingsCard title={__('Section Title')}>
        {/* Form fields */}
      </SettingsCard>
    </SettingsLayout>
  );
}

SettingsLayout Props:

Prop Type Required Description
title string | ReactNode Yes Page title shown in contextual header
description string No Subtitle/description below title
onSave () => Promise<void> No Save handler - shows Save button in header
saveLabel string No Custom label for save button (default: "Save changes")
isLoading boolean No Shows loading state
action ReactNode No Custom action buttons (e.g., Back button)

Layout Behavior:

  1. Contextual Header (Mobile + Desktop)

    • Shows page title and description
    • Shows Save button if onSave provided
    • Shows custom actions if action provided
    • Sticky at top of page
  2. Content Area

    • Automatically boxed with max-w-5xl mx-auto
    • Responsive padding and spacing
    • Consistent with other admin pages
  3. No Inline Header

    • When using onSave or action, inline header is hidden
    • Title/description only appear in contextual header
    • Saves vertical space

Rules for Settings Pages:

  1. Always use SettingsLayout - Never create custom layout
  2. Pass title/description to layout - Don't render inline headers
  3. Use onSave for save actions - Don't render save buttons in content
  4. Use SettingsCard for sections - Consistent card styling
  5. Show loading state - Use isLoading prop during data fetch
  6. Never use full-width layout - Content is always boxed
  7. Never duplicate save buttons - One save button in header only

Examples:

  • Good: admin-spa/src/routes/Settings/Customers.tsx
  • Good: admin-spa/src/routes/Settings/Notifications/Staff.tsx
  • Good: admin-spa/src/routes/Settings/Notifications/Customer.tsx

Files:

  • Layout component: admin-spa/src/routes/Settings/components/SettingsLayout.tsx
  • Card component: admin-spa/src/routes/Settings/components/SettingsCard.tsx

5.9 Mobile Contextual Header Pattern

WooNooW implements a dual-header system for mobile-first UX, ensuring actionable pages have consistent navigation and action buttons.

Concept: Two Headers on Mobile

  1. Contextual Header (Mobile + Desktop)

    • Common actions that work everywhere
    • Format: [Back Button] Page Title [Primary Action]
    • Always visible (sticky)
    • Examples: Back, Edit, Save, Create
  2. Page Header / Extra Actions (Desktop Only)

    • Additional desktop-specific actions
    • Hidden on mobile (hidden md:flex)
    • Examples: Print, Invoice, Label, Export

Implementation Pattern

import { usePageHeader } from '@/contexts/PageHeaderContext';
import { Button } from '@/components/ui/button';

export default function MyPage() {
  const { setPageHeader, clearPageHeader } = usePageHeader();
  const nav = useNavigate();
  
  // Set contextual header
  useEffect(() => {
    const actions = (
      <div className="flex gap-2">
        <Button size="sm" variant="ghost" onClick={() => nav('/parent')}>
          {__('Back')}
        </Button>
        <Button size="sm" onClick={handlePrimaryAction}>
          {__('Save')}
        </Button>
      </div>
    );
    
    setPageHeader(__('Page Title'), actions);
    return () => clearPageHeader();
  }, [dependencies]);
  
  return (
    <div>
      {/* Desktop-only extra actions */}
      <div className="hidden md:flex gap-2">
        <button onClick={printAction}>{__('Print')}</button>
        <button onClick={exportAction}>{__('Export')}</button>
      </div>
      
      {/* Page content */}
    </div>
  );
}

Rules for CRUD Pages

Page Type Contextual Header Page Header
List None (list page) Filters, Search
Detail [Back] Title [Edit] Print, Invoice, Label
New [Back] Title [Create] None
Edit [Back] Title [Save] None

Form Submit Pattern

For New/Edit pages, move submit button to contextual header:

// Use formRef to trigger submit from header
const formRef = useRef<HTMLFormElement>(null);

const actions = (
  <Button onClick={() => formRef.current?.requestSubmit()}>
    {__('Save')}
  </Button>
);

<OrderForm formRef={formRef} hideSubmitButton={true} />

Best Practices

  1. No Duplication - If action is in contextual header, remove from page body
  2. Mobile First - Contextual header shows essential actions only
  3. Desktop Enhancement - Extra actions in page header (desktop only)
  4. Consistent Pattern - All CRUD pages follow same structure
  5. Loading States - Buttons show loading state during mutations

Files

  • admin-spa/src/contexts/PageHeaderContext.tsx - Context provider
  • admin-spa/src/hooks/usePageHeader.ts - Hook for setting headers
  • admin-spa/src/components/PageHeader.tsx - Header component

5.8 Error Handling & User Notifications

WooNooW implements a centralized, user-friendly error handling system that ensures consistent UX across all features.

Core Principles

  1. Never expose technical details to end users (no "API 500", stack traces, or raw error codes)
  2. Use appropriate notification types based on context
  3. Provide actionable feedback with clear next steps
  4. Maintain consistency across all pages and features

Notification Types

Context Component Use Case Example
Page Load Errors <ErrorCard> Query failures, data fetch errors "Failed to load orders" with retry button
Action Errors toast.error() Mutation failures, form submissions "Failed to create order. Please check all required fields."
Action Success toast.success() Successful mutations "Order created successfully"
Inline Validation <ErrorMessage> Form field errors "Email address is required"

Implementation

// For mutations (create, update, delete)
import { showErrorToast, showSuccessToast } from '@/lib/errorHandling';

const mutation = useMutation({
  mutationFn: OrdersApi.create,
  onSuccess: (data) => {
    showSuccessToast('Order created successfully', `Order #${data.number} created`);
  },
  onError: (error) => {
    showErrorToast(error); // Automatically extracts user-friendly message
  }
});

// For queries (page loads)
import { ErrorCard } from '@/components/ErrorCard';
import { getPageLoadErrorMessage } from '@/lib/errorHandling';

if (query.isError) {
  return <ErrorCard 
    title="Failed to load data"
    message={getPageLoadErrorMessage(query.error)}
    onRetry={() => query.refetch()}
  />;
}

Error Message Mapping

Backend errors are mapped to user-friendly messages in lib/errorHandling.ts:

const friendlyMessages = {
  'no_items': 'Please add at least one product to the order',
  'create_failed': 'Failed to create order. Please check all required fields.',
  'update_failed': 'Failed to update order. Please check all fields.',
  'not_found': 'The requested item was not found',
  'forbidden': 'You do not have permission to perform this action',
};

Toast Configuration

  • Position: Bottom-right
  • Duration: 4s (success), 6s (errors)
  • Theme: Light mode with colored backgrounds
  • Colors: Green (success), Red (error), Amber (warning), Blue (info)

Files

  • admin-spa/src/lib/errorHandling.ts — Centralized error utilities
  • admin-spa/src/components/ErrorCard.tsx — Page load error component
  • admin-spa/src/components/ui/sonner.tsx — Toast configuration

5.9 Data Validation & Required Fields

WooNooW enforces strict validation rules to ensure data integrity and provide clear feedback to users.

Order Creation Validation

All orders must include:

Field Requirement Error Message
Products At least 1 product "At least one product is required"
Billing First Name Required "Billing first name is required"
Billing Last Name Required "Billing last name is required"
Billing Email Required & valid format "Billing email is required" / "Billing email is not valid"
Billing Address Required "Billing address is required"
Billing City Required "Billing city is required"
Billing Postcode Required "Billing postcode is required"
Billing Country Required "Billing country is required"

Backend Validation Response

When validation fails, the API returns:

{
  "error": "validation_failed",
  "message": "Please complete all required fields",
  "fields": [
    "Billing first name is required",
    "Billing email is required",
    "Billing address is required"
  ]
}

Frontend Display

The error handling utility automatically formats field errors as a bulleted list:

❌ Please complete all required fields

• Billing first name is required
• Billing email is required
• Billing address is required
• Billing city is required
• Billing postcode is required

Each field error appears as a bullet point on its own line, making it easy for users to scan and see exactly what needs to be fixed.

Implementation Location

  • Backend validation: includes/Api/OrdersController.php create() method
  • Frontend handling: admin-spa/src/lib/errorHandling.ts getErrorMessage()

5.10 Internationalization (i18n)

WooNooW follows WordPress translation standards to ensure all user-facing strings are translatable.

Text Domain: woonoow

Backend (PHP)

Use WordPress translation functions:

// Simple translation
__( 'Billing first name', 'woonoow' )

// Translation with sprintf
sprintf( __( '%s is required', 'woonoow' ), $field_label )

// Translators comment for context
/* translators: %s: field label */
sprintf( __( '%s is required', 'woonoow' ), $label )

Frontend (TypeScript/React)

Use the i18n utility wrapper:

import { __, sprintf } from '@/lib/i18n';

// Simple translation
__('Failed to load data')

// Translation with sprintf (placeholders)
sprintf(__('Order #%s created'), orderNumber)
sprintf(__('Edit Order #%s'), orderId)

// In components
<button>{__('Try again')}</button>
<h2>{sprintf(__('Order #%s'), order.number)}</h2>

// In error messages
const title = __('Please complete all required fields');
const message = sprintf(__('Order #%s has been created'), data.number);

Translation Files

  • Backend strings: Extracted to languages/woonoow.pot
  • Frontend strings: Loaded via wp.i18n (WordPress handles this)
  • Translation utilities: admin-spa/src/lib/i18n.ts

Best Practices

  1. Never hardcode user-facing strings - Always use translation functions
  2. Use translators comments for context when using placeholders
  3. Keep strings simple - Avoid complex concatenation
  4. Test in English first - Ensure strings make sense before translation

5.11 Loading States

WooNooW provides a consistent loading UI system across the application to ensure a polished user experience.

Component: admin-spa/src/components/LoadingState.tsx

Loading Components

**1. LoadingState (Default)**a

import { LoadingState } from '@/components/LoadingState';

// Default loading
<LoadingState />

// Custom message
<LoadingState message={__('Loading order...')} />

// Different sizes
<LoadingState size="sm" message={__('Saving...')} />
<LoadingState size="md" message={__('Loading...')} /> // default
<LoadingState size="lg" message={__('Processing...')} />

// Full screen overlay
<LoadingState fullScreen message={__('Loading...')} />

2. PageLoadingState

import { PageLoadingState } from '@/components/LoadingState';

// For full page loads
if (isLoading) {
  return <PageLoadingState message={__('Loading order...')} />;
}

3. InlineLoadingState

import { InlineLoadingState } from '@/components/LoadingState';

// For inline loading within components
{isLoading && <InlineLoadingState message={__('Loading...')} />}

4. CardLoadingSkeleton

import { CardLoadingSkeleton } from '@/components/LoadingState';

// For loading card content
{isLoading && <CardLoadingSkeleton />}

5. TableLoadingSkeleton

import { TableLoadingSkeleton } from '@/components/LoadingState';

// For loading table rows
{isLoading && <TableLoadingSkeleton rows={10} />}

Usage Guidelines

Page-Level Loading:

// ✅ Good - Use PageLoadingState for full page loads
if (orderQ.isLoading || countriesQ.isLoading) {
  return <PageLoadingState message={sprintf(__('Loading order #%s...'), orderId)} />;
}

// ❌ Bad - Don't use plain text
if (isLoading) {
  return <div>Loading...</div>;
}

Inline Loading:

// ✅ Good - Use InlineLoadingState for partial loads
{q.isLoading && <InlineLoadingState message={__('Loading order...')} />}

// ❌ Bad - Don't use custom spinners
{q.isLoading && <div><Loader2 className="animate-spin" /> Loading...</div>}

Table Loading:

// ✅ Good - Use TableLoadingSkeleton for tables
{q.isLoading && <TableLoadingSkeleton rows={10} />}

// ❌ Bad - Don't show empty state while loading
{q.isLoading && <div>Loading data...</div>}

Best Practices

  1. Always use i18n - All loading messages must be translatable

    <LoadingState message={__('Loading...')} />
    
  2. Be specific - Use descriptive messages

    // ✅ Good
    <LoadingState message={sprintf(__('Loading order #%s...'), orderId)} />
    
    // ❌ Bad
    <LoadingState message="Loading..." />
    
  3. Choose appropriate size - Match the context

    • sm - Inline, buttons, small components
    • md - Default, cards, sections
    • lg - Full page, important actions
  4. Use skeletons for lists - Better UX than spinners

    {isLoading ? <TableLoadingSkeleton rows={5} /> : <Table data={data} />}
    
  5. Responsive design - Loading states work on all screen sizes

    • Mobile: Optimized spacing and sizing
    • Desktop: Full layout preserved

Pattern Examples

Order Edit Page:

export default function OrdersEdit() {
  const orderQ = useQuery({ ... });
  
  if (orderQ.isLoading) {
    return <LoadingState message={sprintf(__('Loading order #%s...'), orderId)} />;
  }
  
  return <OrderForm ... />;
}

Order Detail Page:

export default function OrderDetail() {
  const q = useQuery({ ... });
  
  return (
    <div>
      <h1>{__('Order Details')}</h1>
      {q.isLoading && <InlineLoadingState message={__('Loading order...')} />}
      {q.data && <OrderContent order={q.data} />}
    </div>
  );
}

Orders List:

export default function OrdersList() {
  const q = useQuery({ ... });
  
  return (
    <table>
      <thead>...</thead>
      <tbody>
        {q.isLoading && <TableLoadingSkeleton rows={10} />}
        {q.data?.map(order => <OrderRow key={order.id} order={order} />)}
      </tbody>
    </table>
  );
}

6. 🔌 Addon Development Standards

6.1 Addon Injection System

WooNooW provides a filter-based addon injection system that allows third-party plugins to integrate seamlessly with the SPA without modifying core files.

Core Principle: All modules that can accept external injection MUST provide filter hooks following the standard naming convention.

6.2 Hook Naming Convention

All WooNooW hooks follow this structure:

woonoow/{category}/{action}[/{subcategory}]

Examples:

  • woonoow/addon_registry - Register addon metadata
  • woonoow/spa_routes - Register SPA routes
  • woonoow/nav_tree - Modify navigation tree
  • woonoow/nav_tree/products/children - Inject into Products submenu
  • woonoow/dashboard/widgets - Add dashboard widgets (future)
  • woonoow/order/detail/panels - Add order detail panels (future)

Rules:

  1. Always prefix with woonoow/
  2. Use lowercase with underscores
  3. Use singular nouns for registries (addon_registry, not addons_registry)
  4. Use hierarchical structure for nested items
  5. Use descriptive names that indicate purpose

6.3 Filter Template Pattern

When creating a new module that accepts external injection, follow this template:

Backend (PHP)

<?php
namespace WooNooW\Compat;

class MyModuleRegistry {
    const OPTION_KEY = 'wnw_my_module_data';
    const VERSION = '1.0.0';
    
    public static function init() {
        add_action('plugins_loaded', [__CLASS__, 'collect_data'], 30);
        add_action('activated_plugin', [__CLASS__, 'flush']);
        add_action('deactivated_plugin', [__CLASS__, 'flush']);
    }
    
    public static function collect_data() {
        $data = [];
        
        /**
         * Filter: woonoow/my_module/items
         * 
         * Allows addons to register items with this module.
         * 
         * @param array $data Array of item configurations
         * 
         * Example:
         * add_filter('woonoow/my_module/items', function($data) {
         *     $data['my-item'] = [
         *         'id'    => 'my-item',
         *         'label' => 'My Item',
         *         'value' => 'something',
         *     ];
         *     return $data;
         * });
         */
        $data = apply_filters('woonoow/my_module/items', $data);
        
        // Validate and store
        $validated = self::validate_items($data);
        update_option(self::OPTION_KEY, [
            'version' => self::VERSION,
            'items'   => $validated,
            'updated' => time(),
        ], false);
    }
    
    private static function validate_items(array $items): array {
        // Validation logic
        return $items;
    }
    
    public static function get_items(): array {
        $data = get_option(self::OPTION_KEY, []);
        return $data['items'] ?? [];
    }
    
    public static function flush() {
        delete_option(self::OPTION_KEY);
    }
    
    public static function get_frontend_data(): array {
        // Return sanitized data for frontend
        return self::get_items();
    }
}

Expose to Frontend (Assets.php)

// In localize_runtime() method
wp_localize_script($handle, 'WNW_MY_MODULE', MyModuleRegistry::get_frontend_data());
wp_add_inline_script($handle, 'window.WNW_MY_MODULE = window.WNW_MY_MODULE || WNW_MY_MODULE;', 'after');

Frontend (TypeScript)

// Read from window
const moduleData = (window as any).WNW_MY_MODULE || [];

// Use in component
function MyComponent() {
  const items = (window as any).WNW_MY_MODULE || [];
  return (
    <div>
      {items.map(item => (
        <div key={item.id}>{item.label}</div>
      ))}
    </div>
  );
}

6.4 Documentation Requirements

When adding a new filter hook, you MUST:

  1. Add to Hook Registry (see section 6.5)
  2. Document in code with PHPDoc
  3. Add example in ADDON_INJECTION_GUIDE.md
  4. Update ADDONS_ADMIN_UI_REQUIREMENTS.md

6.5 Hook Registry

See HOOKS_REGISTRY.md for complete list of available hooks and filters.

6.6 Non-React Addon Development

Question: Can developers build addons without React?

Answer: YES! WooNooW supports multiple addon approaches:

Approach 1: PHP + HTML/CSS/JS (No React)

Traditional WordPress addon development works perfectly:

<?php
/**
 * Plugin Name: My Traditional Addon
 */

// Register addon
add_filter('woonoow/addon_registry', function($addons) {
    $addons['my-addon'] = [
        'id'      => 'my-addon',
        'name'    => 'My Addon',
        'version' => '1.0.0',
    ];
    return $addons;
});

// Add navigation item that links to classic admin page
add_filter('woonoow/nav_tree', function($tree) {
    $tree[] = [
        'key'      => 'my-addon',
        'label'    => 'My Addon',
        'path'     => '/my-addon-classic', // Will redirect to admin page
        'icon'     => 'puzzle',
        'children' => [],
    ];
    return $tree;
});

// Register classic admin page
add_action('admin_menu', function() {
    add_menu_page(
        'My Addon',
        'My Addon',
        'manage_options',
        'my-addon-page',
        'my_addon_render_page',
        'dashicons-admin-generic',
        30
    );
});

function my_addon_render_page() {
    ?>
    <div class="wrap">
        <h1>My Traditional Addon</h1>
        <p>Built with PHP, HTML, CSS, and vanilla JS!</p>
        
        <script>
        // Vanilla JavaScript works fine
        document.addEventListener('DOMContentLoaded', function() {
            console.log('My addon loaded!');
        });
        </script>
    </div>
    <?php
}

This approach:

  • Works with WooNooW navigation
  • No React knowledge required
  • Uses standard WordPress admin pages
  • Can use WordPress admin styles
  • Can enqueue own CSS/JS
  • ⚠️ Opens in separate page (not SPA)

Approach 2: Vanilla JS Component (No React)

For developers who want SPA integration without React:

// dist/MyAddon.js - Vanilla JS module
export default function MyAddonPage(props) {
    const container = document.createElement('div');
    container.className = 'p-6';
    container.innerHTML = `
        <div class="rounded-lg border border-border p-6 bg-card">
            <h2 class="text-xl font-semibold mb-2">My Addon</h2>
            <p class="text-sm opacity-70">Built with vanilla JavaScript!</p>
            <button id="my-button" class="px-4 py-2 bg-blue-500 text-white rounded">
                Click Me
            </button>
        </div>
    `;
    
    // Add event listeners
    setTimeout(() => {
        const button = container.querySelector('#my-button');
        button.addEventListener('click', () => {
            alert('Vanilla JS works!');
        });
    }, 0);
    
    return container;
}

This approach:

  • Integrates with SPA
  • No React required
  • Can use Tailwind classes
  • Can fetch from REST API
  • ⚠️ Must return DOM element
  • ⚠️ Manual state management

Approach 3: React Component (Full SPA)

For developers comfortable with React:

// dist/MyAddon.tsx - React component
import React from 'react';

export default function MyAddonPage() {
    const [count, setCount] = React.useState(0);
    
    return (
        <div className="p-6">
            <div className="rounded-lg border border-border p-6 bg-card">
                <h2 className="text-xl font-semibold mb-2">My Addon</h2>
                <p className="text-sm opacity-70">Built with React!</p>
                <button 
                    onClick={() => setCount(count + 1)}
                    className="px-4 py-2 bg-blue-500 text-white rounded"
                >
                    Clicked {count} times
                </button>
            </div>
        </div>
    );
}

This approach:

  • Full SPA integration
  • React state management
  • Can use React Query
  • Can use WooNooW components
  • Best UX
  • ⚠️ Requires React knowledge

6.7 Addon Development Checklist

When creating a module that accepts addons:

  • Create Registry class (e.g., MyModuleRegistry.php)
  • Add filter hook with woonoow/ prefix
  • Document filter in PHPDoc with example
  • Expose data to frontend via Assets.php
  • Add to HOOKS_REGISTRY.md
  • Add example to ADDON_INJECTION_GUIDE.md
  • Test with example addon
  • Update ADDONS_ADMIN_UI_REQUIREMENTS.md

6.8 Orders Module as Reference

The Orders module is the reference implementation:

  • No external injection (by design)
  • Clean route structure
  • Type-safe components
  • Proper error handling
  • Mobile responsive
  • i18n complete

Use Orders as the template for building new core modules.


7. 🎨 Admin Interface Modes

WooNooW provides three distinct admin interface modes to accommodate different workflows and user preferences:

1. Normal Mode (wp-admin)

  • Access: /wp-admin/admin.php?page=woonoow
  • Layout: Traditional WordPress admin with WooNooW SPA in content area
  • Use Case: Standard WordPress admin workflow
  • Features:
    • WordPress admin bar and sidebar visible
    • Full WordPress admin functionality
    • WooNooW SPA integrated seamlessly
    • Settings submenu hidden (use WooCommerce settings)
  • When to use: When you need access to other WordPress admin features alongside WooNooW

2. Fullscreen Mode

  • Access: Toggle button in WooNooW header
  • Layout: WooNooW SPA only (no WordPress chrome)
  • Use Case: Focused work sessions, order processing
  • Features:
    • Maximized workspace
    • Distraction-free interface
    • All WooNooW features accessible
    • Settings submenu hidden
  • When to use: When you want to focus exclusively on WooNooW tasks

3. Standalone Mode

  • Access: https://yoursite.com/admin
  • Layout: Complete standalone application with custom login
  • Use Case: Quick daily access, mobile-friendly, bookmark-able
  • Features:
    • Custom login page (/admin#/login)
    • WordPress authentication integration
    • Settings submenu visible (SPA settings pages)
    • "WordPress" button to access wp-admin
    • "Logout" button in header
    • Admin bar link in wp-admin to standalone
    • Session persistence across modes
  • When to use: As your primary WooNooW interface, especially on mobile or for quick access

Mode Switching

  • From wp-admin to Standalone: Click "WooNooW" in admin bar
  • From Standalone to wp-admin: Click "WordPress" button in header
  • To Fullscreen: Click fullscreen toggle in any mode
  • Session persistence: Login state is shared across all modes

Settings Submenu Behavior

  • Normal Mode: No settings submenu (use WooCommerce settings in wp-admin)
  • Fullscreen Mode: No settings submenu
  • Standalone Mode: Full settings submenu visible with SPA pages

Implementation: Settings submenu uses dynamic getter in admin-spa/src/nav/tree.ts:

get children() {
  const isStandalone = (window as any).WNW_CONFIG?.standaloneMode;
  if (!isStandalone) return [];
  return [ /* settings items */ ];
}

8. 🤖 AI Agent Collaboration Rules

When using an AI IDE agent (ChatGPT, Claude, etc.):

Step 1: Context Injection

Always load:

  • README.md
  • PROJECT_SOP.md
  • The specific file(s) being edited

Step 2: Editing Rules

  1. All AI edits must be idempotent — never break structure or naming conventions.
  2. Always follow PSR12 PHP standard and React code conventions.
  3. When unsure about a design decision, refer back to this S.O.P. before guessing.
  4. New files must be registered in the correct namespace path.
  5. When editing React components, ensure build compatibility with Vite.

Step 3: Communication

AI agents must:

  • Explain each patch clearly.
  • Never autoremove code without reason.
  • Maintain English for all code comments, Markdown for docs.

7. 📦 Release Steps

  1. Run all builds:
    npm run build && npm run pack
    
  2. Test in LocalWP with a sample Woo store.
  3. Validate HPOS compatibility and order creation flow.
  4. Push final woonoow.zip to release channel (Sejoli, member.dwindi.com, or manual upload).
  5. Tag version using semantic versioning (e.g. v0.2.0-beta).

8. 🧭 Decision Hierarchy

Category Decision Reference
Code Style Follow PSR12 (PHP) & Airbnb/React rules
Architecture PSR4 + modular single responsibility
UI/UX Modern minimal style, standardized using Tailwind + Shadcn UI. Recharts for data visualization.
Icons Use lucide-react via npm i lucide-react. Icons should match Shadcn UI guidelines. Always import directly (e.g. import { Package } from 'lucide-react'). Maintain consistent size (1620px) and stroke width (1.5px). Use Tailwind classes for color states.
Navigation Pattern CRUD pages MUST follow consistent back button navigation: New Order: Index ← New. Edit Order: Index ← Detail ← Edit. Back button always goes to parent page, not index. Use ArrowLeft icon from lucide-react. Toolbar format: <button onClick={() => nav('/parent/path')}><ArrowLeft /> Back</button> <h2>Page Title</h2>
Compatibility Must preserve Woo hooks unless explicitly replaced
Performance Async-first, no blocking mail or sync jobs
Email Policy ALL wp_mail() calls MUST be delayed by 15+ seconds using Action Scheduler or wp-cron. Never send emails synchronously during API requests (create, update, status change). Use OrdersController::schedule_order_email() pattern.
Deployment LocalWP → Coolify → Production

9. 🧩 Future Extensions

  • Addon Manager (JSON feed + licensing integration).
  • Admin Insights (charts, sales analytics with React).
  • Storefront SPA Theme Override (optional full React mode).
  • Developer SDK for 3rd-party addon compatibility.

10. 📜 License & Ownership

All rights reserved to Dwindi (dewe.dev).
The WooNooW project may include GPL-compatible code portions for WordPress compliance.
Redistribution without written consent is prohibited outside official licensing channels.