The Meta Box Conditional Logic extension lets you show fields precisely when you want to and not a second sooner.
The extension provides a variety of visibility options for meta boxes, fields and HTML elements that help you control the organization of your page-editing experience.
Imagine a back end where all custom fields existed on all pages all the time, and somehow, you had to just know which ones to use and when. Everything would be separated and you would have to write hefty functions to connect information behind the scenes.
Fortunately, we live in a better world with better back ends. Lucky you!
With the Conditional Logic extension, developers can control the relationship between fields and powerfully create connections to maximize the efficiency of the process.
As a developer, you get to lay out the rules of a website and determine what can be seen and when.
The MetaBox Conditional Logic extension lets you extend this power to WordPress to both show and hide fields instantly based on the data that’s dynamically entered on the page.
Do you remember that classic Dominoes game? You line up several tiles and when you knock the first one down, it triggers a chain reaction. Down they all go.
But, what if you decided to knock one of the middle tiles down first? What a twist!
The chain reaction would change dramatically and so would your childhood. Okay, maybe not, but your site’s meta boxes and custom fields would certainly benefit from this kind of change.
Similar to Dominoes, you can set up a similar chain reaction in an infinite amount of ways with your site’s custom fields and meta boxes using Meta Box Conditional Logic.
You can set extra options and fields to dynamically and instantly appear after a specific, desired part of your form is filled out by a user.
If a meta box doesn’t apply to a particular page template or post category, you can remove it all together for a polished user experience.
You’ll also get to tailor any page you want with exactly the fields you need.
While you’re already reducing clutter on your site, why not remove default WordPress elements that don’t apply to the page or post you’re editing?
Remove the “Tag” meta box or even the “Publish” section from an editing page to match form to function.
The conditional logic rules to show or hide elements range from super simple to the intricately complex and everything in between.
It’s conditional logic just the way you want it, when you want it. It’s everything you have always wanted to do, done for you, and ready for you to customize and control.
Try this on for size: you can check fields with comparison operators such as = and != but also if a field contains a specific word, phrase or is between, say, a range of dates.
You can even layer multiple conditions on top of each other for a compound statement of extra-specific conditional logic.