Skip to content

andfinally/ratekit-private

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

15 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

RateKit

RateKit

version: 1.1.0 https://ratekit.com

Introduction

RateKit is a simple PHP / jQuery plugin that adds ratings stars to an existing site.

What it does

On loading RateKit transforms any input with class "rating" into a group of ratings stars. The plugin stores ratings in a local SQLIte database: when it loads RateKit checks the existing rating for each input and displays it.

When a user clicks to leave a rating, RateKit checks their IP address. If they've tried to rate that item before within a set period, the new rating isn't registered. RateKit displays their existing rating, then switches back to the overall rating and disables the input. (You can set the period for this check by changing THROTTLE_TIME in config.php.)

If the user hasn't rated that item before, RateKit adds their rating to the overall score and displays the updated rating.

Requirements

  • jQuery
  • PHP

Five minute setup

  • Download the RateKit zip file and uncompress it somewhere handy, like your usual downloads folder.
  • The resulting folder contains a folder ratekit and a few other files.
  • To add RateKit to your site, just copy the ratekit folder to the root of your site. So if your site root is mysite, place ratekit in mysite/ratekit.

Include the CSS

Add the CSS tag

<link href="ratekit/css/ratekit.min.css" type="text/css" rel="stylesheet">

to the of your HTML page

Include the JavaScript

If you don't have jQuery already on your page, you can include it by adding this script tag to the bottom of your HTML page, just before the closing </body> tag.

<script src="//ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/3.2.1/jquery.min.js"></script>

Add the RateKit JavaScript tag after jQuery:

<script src="ratekit/js/ratekit.min.js"></script>

Set Write Permissions on the data folder

Make sure your server can write to the ratekit/data folder. This is a vital step - RateKit won't work without it.

There are different ways to do this, depending on what kind of computer you're using and whether you're using FTP or a local file manager. If you're on a shared hosting environment, the easiest way is ask your host to give the data folder server write permissions.

If you're trying RateKit on a home Mac or Linux machine, you can

  • Launch Terminal.
  • Switch to the location of the ratekit folder in your site, for example type cd /Applications/MAMP/htdocs/mysite/ratekit and hit Enter.
  • Once inside the folder, type sudo chmod -fR go+w data and Enter. You'll be prompted for your password.
  • Close Terminal.

Search online for more details on how to set file permissions. There are some instructions at SimplePie, and there's a detailed explanation in the WordPress Codex. (Basically the data folder in RateKit needs the same permissions as the wp-content folder in WordPress.)

Go to the install page

The RateKit folder includes a special file that sets up the SQLite database. You only need to use this file when setting up RateKit. In your web browser, open the page /ratekit/api/install.php. So if your website is http://mysite.com, go to http://mysite.com/ratekit/api/install.php. The install page will try to create the database RateKit requires to store people's ratings.

If all goes well, you'll see a success message. In that case we recommend you delete install.php.

If there's a problem you'll see an error message. In most cases the problem will be that the server is unable to write to the data folder. Please follow the instructions above and refresh the install page in your browser to make sure it's worked. Once you've made the folder writeable the error message should disappear.

Add rating tags to your page

Wherever you want to show ratings stars, add an input (or any other tag, like a div) to your page with the class rating:

<input id="exultation" class="rating" data-size="sm">

  • Every rating tag must have a unique ID: that's how RateKit tells them apart.
  • Every rating tag must have the class "rating".
  • Set the size you want the stars to have with the data-size attribute: data-size="sm" is small.
  • For read-only stars, add data-readonly="true" to the tag.
  • For whole number ratings, add data-step="1".
  • For structured data markup and an info label giving rating and rating count, add data-show-label="true".

See the examples page for demos.

More advanced option

RateKit includes some CSS styles from the Bootstrap framework. If your site already has Bootstrap and the Glyphicons fonts, you have the option of saving on filesize by leaving out the Bootstrap CSS in boostrap-parts.css and deleting the fonts folder in ratekit. If you know how to use the Gulp build manager, remove the reference to that file from the gulpfile.js and run the css task to recompile ratekit.min.css. Otherwise you can delete the first section from ratekit.min.css, which contains the Bootstrap styles.

Acknowledgements

The RateKit front end includes parts of Kartik Visweswaran's splendid Bootstrap Star Rating jQuery plugin. Thank you Kartik!

Enjoy RateKit?

Please consider a small donation to help me maintain RateKit and create other useful stuff.

Paypal

Bitcoin

About

Add star ratings to your site in a jiffy - https://ratekit.com

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published