| 12345678910111213141516171819202122232425262728293031323334353637383940414243444546474849505152535455565758596061626364656667686970717273747576777879808182838485868788 | <?php/* Typically in a Tripal template, the data needed is retrieved using a call to * chado_expand_var function.  For example, to retrieve all  * of the project relationships for this node, the following function call would be made: *  *   $project = chado_expand_var($project,'table','project_relationship'); *  * However, this function call can be extremely slow when there are numerous relationships. * This is because the chado_expand_var function is recursive and expands  * all data following the foreign key relationships tree.  Therefore, to speed retrieval * of data, a special variable is provided to this template: *  *   $project->all_relationships; *    * This variable is an array with two sub arrays with the keys 'object' and 'subject'.  The array with * key 'object' contains relationships where the project is the object, and the array with * the key 'subject' contains relationships where the project is the subject */$project = $variables['node']->project;$all_relationships = $project->all_relationships;$object_rels = $all_relationships['object'];$subject_rels = $all_relationships['subject'];if (count($object_rels) > 0 or count($subject_rels) > 0) { ?>    <div class="tripal_project-data-block-desc tripal-data-block-desc">This        project is related to the following other projects:    </div> <?php  // the $headers array is an array of fields to use as the colum headers.  // additional documentation can be found here  // https://api.drupal.org/api/drupal/includes%21theme.inc/function/theme_table/7  $headers = ['Relationship'];  // the $rows array contains an array of rows where each row is an array  // of values for each column of the table in that row.  Additional documentation  // can be found here:  // https://api.drupal.org/api/drupal/includes%21theme.inc/function/theme_table/7  $rows = [];  // first add in the subject relationships.    foreach ($subject_rels as $rel_type => $objects) {    foreach ($objects as $object) {      // link the project to it's node      $object_name = $object->record->object_project_id->name;      if (property_exists($object->record, 'nid')) {        $object_name = l($object_name, "node/" . $object->record->nid, ['attributes' => ['target' => "_blank"]]);      }      $rows[] = [        "$project->name is a \"$rel_type\" of $object_name",      ];    }  }  // second add in the object relationships.    foreach ($object_rels as $rel_type => $subjects) {    foreach ($subjects as $subject) {      // link the project to it's node      $subject_name = $subject->record->subject_project_id->name;      if (property_exists($subject->record, 'nid')) {        $subject_name = l($subject_name, "node/" . $subject->record->nid, ['attributes' => ['target' => "_blank"]]);      }      $rows[] = [        "$subject_name is a \"$rel_type\" of $project->name",      ];    }  }  // the $table array contains the headers and rows array as well as other  // options for controlling the display of the table.  Additional  // documentation can be found here:  // https://api.drupal.org/api/drupal/includes%21theme.inc/function/theme_table/7  $table = [    'header' => $headers,    'rows' => $rows,    'attributes' => [      'id' => 'tripal_project-table-relationship-subject',      'class' => 'tripal-data-table',    ],    'sticky' => FALSE,    'caption' => '',    'colgroups' => [],    'empty' => '',  ];  // once we have our table array structure defined, we call Drupal's theme_table()  // function to generate the table.  print theme_table($table);}
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