This plugin hasn’t been tested with the latest 3 major releases of WordPress. It may no longer be maintained or supported and may have compatibility issues when used with more recent versions of WordPress.

Taxonomy List Widget

Description

Creates lists of non-hierarchical taxonomies (such as post tags) as an alternative to term (tag) clouds. Multiple widgets can be used, each with its own set of options.

Numerous formatting options are provided, including maximum numbers of terms, term order, truncating of term names, and more. List styles are fully customizable, with built-in support for bulleted lists and numbered lists.

Using the taxonomy_list_widget function, users can generate lists for use outside of the included widget.

Only use version 1.2 or higher with WordPress 4.2 and later releases. WordPress 4.2 changed how taxonomy information is stored in the database, which directly impacts this plugin’s include/exclude term functionality.

This plugin was formerly known as the Tag List Widget. It was completely rewritten for version 1.0.

Installation

  1. Upload taxonomy-list-widget.php to /wp-content/plugins/.
  2. Activate plugin through the WordPress Plugins menu.
  3. Activate widget from the Appearance > Widgets menu in WordPress.
  4. Set display options from the widget’s administration panel.

FAQ

What happened to the Tag List Widget plugin?

Since I first wrote the Tag Dropdown Widget plugin upon which this plugin is based (in November 2009), WordPress introduced custom taxonomies and, as more-fully discussed below, saw a new widgets API overtake its predecessor. As part of the widgets-API-related rewrite, I expanded the plugin to support non-hierarchical custom taxonomies, which necessitated a new name for the plugin.

Why did you rewrite the plugin?

When I first wrote the Tag Dropdown Widget plugin, which I later forked to create the Tag List Widget plugin, WordPress was amidst a change in how widgets were managed. I decided to utilize the old widget methods to ensure the greatest compatibility at the time. In the nearly two years since I released the first version of this plugin, the new widget system has been widely adopted, putting this plugin at a disadvantage. So, I rewrote the plugin to use the new widget API and added support for non-hierarchical taxonomies other than just post tags.

I upgraded to version 1.0 and all of my widgets disappeared. What happened?

As discussed above, WordPress’ widget system has changed drastically since I first released this plugin. To facilitate multiple uses of the same widget while allowing each to maintain its own set of options, the manner for storing widget options changed. As a result, there is no practical way to transition a widget’s options from version 0.3.1 to 1.0.

If my theme does not support widgets, or I would like to include the list outside of the sidebar, can I still use the plugin?

Insert the function <?php if( function_exists( 'taxonomy_list_widget' ) ) echo taxonomy_list_widget( $args, $id ); ?> where the list should appear, specifying $args as an array of arguments and, optionally, $id as a string uniquely identifying this list.

  • taxonomy – slug of taxonomy for list. Defaults to post_tag.
  • select_name – name of first (default) option in the list. Defaults to Select Tag.
  • max_name_length – integer representing maximum length of term name to display. Set to 0 to show full names. Defaults to 0.
  • cutoff – string indicating that a term name has been cutoff based on the max_name_length setting. Defaults to an ellipsis (&hellip;).
  • limit – integer specifying maximum number of terms to retrieve. Set to 0 for no limit. Defaults to 0.
  • orderby – either name to order by term name or count to order by the number of posts associated with the given term. Defaults to name.
  • order – either ASC for ascending order or DESC for descending order. Defaults to ASC.
  • threshold – integer specifying the minimum number of posts to which a term must be assigned to be included in the list. Set to 0 for now threshold. Defaults to 0.
  • incexc – include or exclude to either include or exclude the terms whose IDs are included in incexc_ids. By default, this restriction is not enabled.
  • incexc_ids – comma-separated list of term IDs to either include or exclude based on the incexc setting.
  • hide_empty – set to false to include in the list any terms that haven’t been assigned to any objects (i.e. unused tags). Defaults to true.
  • post_counts – set to true to include post counts after term names. Defaults to false.
  • delimiter – sets list style. Native options are ul, ol, and nl for bulleted list, numbered list, and line breaks, respectively. By passing an array with keys before_list, after_list, before_item, and after_item, you can completely customize the list style.
  • rel – either dofollow or nofollow. Can still use taxonomy_list_widget_link_rel filter to specify link relationship.

Why is the TLW_direct() function deprecated?

Version 1.0 represents a complete rewrite of the original Tag List Widget plugin. As part of the rewrite, all prior functions for generating tag lists were deprecated, or marked as obsolete, because they are unable to access the full complement of features introduced in version 1.0. While the functions still exist, their capabilities are extremely limited and they should not be replaced with taxonomy_list_widget().

Where do I obtain a term’s ID for use with the inclusion or exclusion options?

Term IDs can be obtained in a variety of ways. The easiest is to visit the taxonomy term editor (Post Tags, found under Posts, for example) and, while hovering over the term’s name, looking at your browser’s status bar. At the very end of the address shown in the status bar, the term ID will follow the text “tag_ID.”

You can also obtain the term ID by clicking the edit link below any term’s name in the Post Tags page. Next, look at your browser’s address bar. At the very end of the address, the term ID will follow the text “tag_ID.”

I’d like more control over the tags shown in the list. Is this possible?

This plugin relies on WordPress’ get_terms function (https://codex.wordpress.org/Function_Reference/get_terms). To modify the arguments passed to this function, use the taxonomy_list_widget_options filter to specify any of the arguments discussed in the Codex page for get_terms.

To make targeting a specific filter reference possible should you use multiple instances of the list (multiple widgets, use of the taxonomy_list_widget function, or some combination thereof), the filter provides a second argument, $id, that is either the numeric ID of the widget’s instance or the string provided as the second argument to taxonomy_list_widget.

Reviews

སྤྱི་ཟླ་བཅུ་གཅིག་པ། 26, 2021
Works fine with version 5.8.2 Widget appears as expected, just had to remember to search for TAXONOMY widget not TAG widget.
སྤྱི་ཟླ་བརྒྱད་པ། 12, 2021
I too am using GP Theme and just wanted to show tags in sidebar. Installed plugin and nothing happened. Various configuration of the widget also did nothing and didn’t even appear in the sidebar. Could just be out of date and no longer work, not sure!
སྤྱི་ཟླ་དྲུག་པ། 26, 2020
I am using the widget to display tags in a sidebar, and don’t want to show all tags. This widget can exclude/include tags. Tested on mobile, looks and works fine (GP theme) Thank you for the plugin.
སྤྱི་ཟླ་ལྔ་པ། 16, 2020
I used this plugin to concert the Tag cloud into Listing and it worked without issue. Happy with the functionality. However, it seems that this plugin also makes many pages ‘mobile unfriendly’ on google console. Can author check this issue please? Thanks!
སྤྱི་ཟླ་བདུན་པ། 20, 2018
not possible to chose taxonomies, only tags.
སྤྱི་ཟླ་བདུན་པ། 22, 2017
Very neat!
Read all 12 reviews

Contributors & Developers

“Taxonomy List Widget” is open source software. The following people have contributed to this plugin.

Contributors

Translate “Taxonomy List Widget” into your language.

Interested in development?

Browse the code, check out the SVN repository, or subscribe to the development log by RSS.

Changelog

1.3.2

  • Fix translation support.

1.3.1

  • PHP 7.3 compatibility

1.3

  • Update for WordPress 4.3 by removing PHP4-style widget constructor usage (https://make.wordpress.org/core/2015/07/02/deprecating-php4-style-constructors-in-wordpress-4-3/).

1.2

  • Update for WordPress 4.2 to handle term splitting in the plugin’s include/exclude functionality. Details at https://make.wordpress.org/core/2015/02/16/taxonomy-term-splitting-in-4-2-a-developer-guide/.

1.1.2

  • Correct problem in WordPress 3.3 and higher that resulted in an empty taxonomy dropdown.
  • Remove all uses of PHP short tags.

1.1.1

  • Allow empty title in widget options. If empty, the taxonomy_list_widget_title filter isn’t run.

1.1

  • Provide control over link relationship (dofollow and nofollow) in widget. This capability is still available via the taxonomy_list_widget_link_rel filter.

1.0.1

  • Fix fatal error in older WordPress versions resulting from PHP4 and PHP5 constructors existing in widget class.

1.0.0.2

  • Fix bug in post count threshold that resulted in no terms being listed.

1.0.0.1

  • Fix fatal error

1.0

  • Completely rewritten plugin to use WordPress’ newer Widgets API.
  • Drop support for WordPress 2.7 and earlier.
  • Add support for all public, non-hierarchical custom taxonomies, in addition to Post Tags.
  • Introduce new, more flexible function for manually generating lists.
  • Fixed persistent bugs in the include/exclude functionality.
  • Widget admin is translation-ready.

0.3.1

  • Replace id on list items with class.

0.3

  • Reduced variables stored in database to two.

0.2

  • Added function TLW_direct