__( 'Export Users', 'my-plugin' ), * 'description' => __( 'Exports user data to CSV format.', 'my-plugin' ), * 'category' => 'data-export', * 'execute_callback' => 'my_plugin_export_users', * 'permission_callback' => function(): bool { * return current_user_can( 'export' ); * }, * 'input_schema' => array( * 'type' => 'string', * 'enum' => array( 'subscriber', 'contributor', 'author', 'editor', 'administrator' ), * 'description' => __( 'Limits the export to users with this role.', 'my-plugin' ), * 'required' => false, * ), * 'output_schema' => array( * 'type' => 'string', * 'description' => __( 'User data in CSV format.', 'my-plugin' ), * 'required' => true, * ), * 'meta' => array( * 'show_in_rest' => true, * ), * ) * ); * } * add_action( 'wp_abilities_api_init', 'my_plugin_register_abilities' ); * * Once registered, abilities can be checked, retrieved, and managed: * * // Checks if an ability is registered, and prints its label. * if ( wp_has_ability( 'my-plugin/export-users' ) ) { * $ability = wp_get_ability( 'my-plugin/export-users' ); * * echo $ability->get_label(); * } * * // Gets all registered abilities. * $all_abilities = wp_get_abilities(); * * // Unregisters when no longer needed. * wp_unregister_ability( 'my-plugin/export-users' ); * * ## Best Practices * * - Always register abilities on the `wp_abilities_api_init` hook. * - Use namespaced ability names to prevent conflicts. * - Implement robust permission checks in permission callbacks. * - Provide an `input_schema` to ensure data integrity and document expected inputs. * - Define an `output_schema` to describe return values and validate responses. * - Return `WP_Error` objects for failures rather than throwing exceptions. * - Use internationalization functions for all user-facing strings. * * @package WordPress * @subpackage Abilities_API * @since 6.9.0 */ declare( strict_types = 1 ); /** * Registers a new ability using the Abilities API. It requires three steps: * * 1. Hook into the `wp_abilities_api_init` action. * 2. Call `wp_register_ability()` with a namespaced name and configuration. * 3. Provide execute and permission callbacks. * * Example: * * function my_plugin_register_abilities(): void { * wp_register_ability( * 'my-plugin/analyze-text', * array( * 'label' => __( 'Analyze Text', 'my-plugin' ), * 'description' => __( 'Performs sentiment analysis on provided text.', 'my-plugin' ), * 'category' => 'text-processing', * 'input_schema' => array( * 'type' => 'string', * 'description' => __( 'The text to be analyzed.', 'my-plugin' ), * 'minLength' => 10, * 'required' => true, * ), * 'output_schema' => array( * 'type' => 'string', * 'enum' => array( 'positive', 'negative', 'neutral' ), * 'description' => __( 'The sentiment result: positive, negative, or neutral.', 'my-plugin' ), * 'required' => true, * ), * 'execute_callback' => 'my_plugin_analyze_text', * 'permission_callback' => 'my_plugin_can_analyze_text', * 'meta' => array( * 'annotations' => array( * 'readonly' => true, * ), * 'show_in_rest' => true, * ), * ) * ); * } * add_action( 'wp_abilities_api_init', 'my_plugin_register_abilities' ); * * ### Naming Conventions * * Ability names must follow these rules: * * - Include a namespace prefix (e.g., `my-plugin/my-ability`). * - Use only lowercase alphanumeric characters, dashes, and forward slashes. * - Use descriptive, action-oriented names (e.g., `process-payment`, `generate-report`). * * ### Categories * * Abilities must be organized into categories. Ability categories provide better * discoverability and must be registered before the abilities that reference them: * * function my_plugin_register_categories(): void { * wp_register_ability_category( * 'text-processing', * array( * 'label' => __( 'Text Processing', 'my-plugin' ), * 'description' => __( 'Abilities for analyzing and transforming text.', 'my-plugin' ), * ) * ); * } * add_action( 'wp_abilities_api_categories_init', 'my_plugin_register_categories' ); * * ### Input and Output Schemas * * Schemas define the expected structure, type, and constraints for ability inputs * and outputs using JSON Schema syntax. They serve two critical purposes: automatic * validation of data passed to and returned from abilities, and self-documenting * API contracts for developers. * * WordPress implements a validator based on a subset of the JSON Schema Version 4 * specification (https://json-schema.org/specification-links.html#draft-4). * For details on supported JSON Schema properties and syntax, see the * related WordPress REST API Schema documentation: * https://developer.wordpress.org/rest-api/extending-the-rest-api/schema/#json-schema-basics * * Defining schemas is mandatory when there is a value to pass or return. * They ensure data integrity, improve developer experience, and enable * better documentation: * * 'input_schema' => array( * 'type' => 'string', * 'description' => __( 'The text to be analyzed.', 'my-plugin' ), * 'minLength' => 10, * 'required' => true, * ), * 'output_schema' => array( * 'type' => 'string', * 'enum' => array( 'positive', 'negative', 'neutral' ), * 'description' => __( 'The sentiment result: positive, negative, or neutral.', 'my-plugin' ), * 'required' => true, * ), * * ### Callbacks * * #### Execute Callback * * The execute callback performs the ability's core functionality. It receives * optional input data and returns either a result or `WP_Error` on failure. * * function my_plugin_analyze_text( string $input ): string|WP_Error { * $score = My_Plugin::perform_sentiment_analysis( $input ); * if ( is_wp_error( $score ) ) { * return $score; * } * return My_Plugin::interpret_sentiment_score( $score ); * } * * #### Permission Callback * * The permission callback determines whether the ability can be executed. * It receives the same input as the execute callback and must return a * boolean or `WP_Error`. Common use cases include checking user capabilities, * validating API keys, or verifying system state: * * function my_plugin_can_analyze_text( string $input ): bool|WP_Error { * return current_user_can( 'edit_posts' ); * } * * ### REST API Integration * * Abilities can be exposed through the REST API by setting `show_in_rest` * to `true` in the meta configuration: * * 'meta' => array( * 'show_in_rest' => true, * ), * * This allows abilities to be invoked via HTTP requests to the WordPress REST API. * * @since 6.9.0 * * @see WP_Abilities_Registry::register() * @see wp_register_ability_category() * @see wp_unregister_ability() * * @param string $name The name of the ability. Must be a namespaced string containing * a prefix, e.g., `my-plugin/my-ability`. Can only contain lowercase * alphanumeric characters, dashes, and forward slashes. * @param array $args { * An associative array of arguments for configuring the ability. * * @type string $label Required. The human-readable label for the ability. * @type string $description Required. A detailed description of what the ability does * and when it should be used. * @type string $category Required. The ability category slug this ability belongs to. * The ability category must be registered via `wp_register_ability_category()` * before registering the ability. * @type callable $execute_callback Required. A callback function to execute when the ability is invoked. * Receives optional mixed input data and must return either a result * value (any type) or a `WP_Error` object on failure. * @type callable $permission_callback Required. A callback function to check permissions before execution. * Receives optional mixed input data (same as `execute_callback`) and * must return `true`/`false` for simple checks, or `WP_Error` for * detailed error responses. * @type array $input_schema Optional. JSON Schema definition for validating the ability's input. * Must be a valid JSON Schema object defining the structure and * constraints for input data. Used for automatic validation and * API documentation. * @type array $output_schema Optional. JSON Schema definition for the ability's output. * Describes the structure of successful return values from * `execute_callback`. Used for documentation and validation. * @type array $meta { * Optional. Additional metadata for the ability. * * @type array $annotations { * Optional. Semantic annotations describing the ability's behavioral characteristics. * These annotations are hints for tooling and documentation. * * @type bool|null $readonly Optional. If true, the ability does not modify its environment. * @type bool|null $destructive Optional. If true, the ability may perform destructive updates to its environment. * If false, the ability performs only additive updates. * @type bool|null $idempotent Optional. If true, calling the ability repeatedly with the same arguments * will have no additional effect on its environment. * } * @type bool $show_in_rest Optional. Whether to expose this ability in the REST API. * When true, the ability can be invoked via HTTP requests. * Default false. * } * @type string $ability_class Optional. Fully-qualified custom class name to instantiate * instead of the default `WP_Ability` class. The custom class * must extend `WP_Ability`. Useful for advanced customization * of ability behavior. * } * @return WP_Ability|null The registered ability instance on success, `null` on failure. */ function wp_register_ability( string $name, array $args ): ?WP_Ability { if ( ! doing_action( 'wp_abilities_api_init' ) ) { _doing_it_wrong( __FUNCTION__, sprintf( /* translators: 1: wp_abilities_api_init, 2: string value of the ability name. */ __( 'Abilities must be registered on the %1$s action. The ability %2$s was not registered.' ), 'wp_abilities_api_init', '' . esc_html( $name ) . '' ), '6.9.0' ); return null; } $registry = WP_Abilities_Registry::get_instance(); if ( null === $registry ) { return null; } return $registry->register( $name, $args ); } /** * Unregisters an ability from the Abilities API. * * Removes a previously registered ability from the global registry. Use this to * disable abilities provided by other plugins or when an ability is no longer needed. * * Can be called at any time after the ability has been registered. * * Example: * * if ( wp_has_ability( 'other-plugin/some-ability' ) ) { * wp_unregister_ability( 'other-plugin/some-ability' ); * } * * @since 6.9.0 * * @see WP_Abilities_Registry::unregister() * @see wp_register_ability() * * @param string $name The name of the ability to unregister, including namespace prefix * (e.g., 'my-plugin/my-ability'). * @return WP_Ability|null The unregistered ability instance on success, `null` on failure. */ function wp_unregister_ability( string $name ): ?WP_Ability { $registry = WP_Abilities_Registry::get_instance(); if ( null === $registry ) { return null; } return $registry->unregister( $name ); } /** * Checks if an ability is registered. * * Use this for conditional logic and feature detection before attempting to * retrieve or use an ability. * * Example: * * // Displays different UI based on available abilities. * if ( wp_has_ability( 'premium-plugin/advanced-export' ) ) { * echo 'Export with Premium Features'; * } else { * echo 'Basic Export'; * } * * @since 6.9.0 * * @see WP_Abilities_Registry::is_registered() * @see wp_get_ability() * * @param string $name The name of the ability to check, including namespace prefix * (e.g., 'my-plugin/my-ability'). * @return bool `true` if the ability is registered, `false` otherwise. */ function wp_has_ability( string $name ): bool { $registry = WP_Abilities_Registry::get_instance(); if ( null === $registry ) { return false; } return $registry->is_registered( $name ); } /** * Retrieves a registered ability. * * Returns the ability instance for inspection or use. The instance provides access * to the ability's configuration, metadata, and execution methods. * * Example: * * // Prints information about a registered ability. * $ability = wp_get_ability( 'my-plugin/export-data' ); * if ( $ability ) { * echo $ability->get_label() . ': ' . $ability->get_description(); * } * * @since 6.9.0 * * @see WP_Abilities_Registry::get_registered() * @see wp_has_ability() * * @param string $name The name of the ability, including namespace prefix * (e.g., 'my-plugin/my-ability'). * @return WP_Ability|null The registered ability instance, or `null` if not registered. */ function wp_get_ability( string $name ): ?WP_Ability { $registry = WP_Abilities_Registry::get_instance(); if ( null === $registry ) { return null; } return $registry->get_registered( $name ); } /** * Retrieves all registered abilities. * * Returns an array of all ability instances currently registered in the system. * Use this for discovery, debugging, or building administrative interfaces. * * Example: * * // Prints information about all available abilities. * $abilities = wp_get_abilities(); * foreach ( $abilities as $ability ) { * echo $ability->get_label() . ': ' . $ability->get_description() . "\n"; * } * * @since 6.9.0 * * @see WP_Abilities_Registry::get_all_registered() * * @return WP_Ability[] An array of registered WP_Ability instances. Returns an empty * array if no abilities are registered or if the registry is unavailable. */ function wp_get_abilities(): array { $registry = WP_Abilities_Registry::get_instance(); if ( null === $registry ) { return array(); } return $registry->get_all_registered(); } /** * Registers a new ability category. * * Ability categories provide a way to organize and group related abilities for better * discoverability and management. Ability categories must be registered before abilities * that reference them. * * Ability categories must be registered on the `wp_abilities_api_categories_init` action hook. * * Example: * * function my_plugin_register_categories() { * wp_register_ability_category( * 'content-management', * array( * 'label' => __( 'Content Management', 'my-plugin' ), * 'description' => __( 'Abilities for managing and organizing content.', 'my-plugin' ), * ) * ); * } * add_action( 'wp_abilities_api_categories_init', 'my_plugin_register_categories' ); * * @since 6.9.0 * * @see WP_Ability_Categories_Registry::register() * @see wp_register_ability() * @see wp_unregister_ability_category() * * @param string $slug The unique slug for the ability category. Must contain only lowercase * alphanumeric characters and dashes (e.g., 'data-export'). * @param array $args { * An associative array of arguments for the ability category. * * @type string $label Required. The human-readable label for the ability category. * @type string $description Required. A description of what abilities in this category do. * @type array $meta Optional. Additional metadata for the ability category. * } * @return WP_Ability_Category|null The registered ability category instance on success, `null` on failure. */ function wp_register_ability_category( string $slug, array $args ): ?WP_Ability_Category { if ( ! doing_action( 'wp_abilities_api_categories_init' ) ) { _doing_it_wrong( __FUNCTION__, sprintf( /* translators: 1: wp_abilities_api_categories_init, 2: ability category slug. */ __( 'Ability categories must be registered on the %1$s action. The ability category %2$s was not registered.' ), 'wp_abilities_api_categories_init', '' . esc_html( $slug ) . '' ), '6.9.0' ); return null; } $registry = WP_Ability_Categories_Registry::get_instance(); if ( null === $registry ) { return null; } return $registry->register( $slug, $args ); } /** * Unregisters an ability category. * * Removes a previously registered ability category from the global registry. Use this to * disable ability categories that are no longer needed. * * Can be called at any time after the ability category has been registered. * * Example: * * if ( wp_has_ability_category( 'deprecated-category' ) ) { * wp_unregister_ability_category( 'deprecated-category' ); * } * * @since 6.9.0 * * @see WP_Ability_Categories_Registry::unregister() * @see wp_register_ability_category() * * @param string $slug The slug of the ability category to unregister. * @return WP_Ability_Category|null The unregistered ability category instance on success, `null` on failure. */ function wp_unregister_ability_category( string $slug ): ?WP_Ability_Category { $registry = WP_Ability_Categories_Registry::get_instance(); if ( null === $registry ) { return null; } return $registry->unregister( $slug ); } /** * Checks if an ability category is registered. * * Use this for conditional logic and feature detection before attempting to * retrieve or use an ability category. * * Example: * * // Displays different UI based on available ability categories. * if ( wp_has_ability_category( 'premium-features' ) ) { * echo 'Premium Features Available'; * } else { * echo 'Standard Features'; * } * * @since 6.9.0 * * @see WP_Ability_Categories_Registry::is_registered() * @see wp_get_ability_category() * * @param string $slug The slug of the ability category to check. * @return bool `true` if the ability category is registered, `false` otherwise. */ function wp_has_ability_category( string $slug ): bool { $registry = WP_Ability_Categories_Registry::get_instance(); if ( null === $registry ) { return false; } return $registry->is_registered( $slug ); } /** * Retrieves a registered ability category. * * Returns the ability category instance for inspection or use. The instance provides access * to the ability category's configuration and metadata. * * Example: * * // Prints information about a registered ability category. * $ability_category = wp_get_ability_category( 'content-management' ); * if ( $ability_category ) { * echo $ability_category->get_label() . ': ' . $ability_category->get_description(); * } * * @since 6.9.0 * * @see WP_Ability_Categories_Registry::get_registered() * @see wp_has_ability_category() * @see wp_get_ability_categories() * * @param string $slug The slug of the ability category. * @return WP_Ability_Category|null The ability category instan BetWinner App Your Ultimate Betting Companion – Bodaq-USA
BetWinner App Your Ultimate Betting Companion

The BetWinner App تطبيق BetWinner للهواتف المحمولة is revolutionizing the way bettors engage with sports and casino games. With an ever-increasing number of people turning to online platforms for their entertainment and betting needs, the BetWinner App has emerged as a top choice. This article will dive deep into the features, benefits, and user experience associated with the BetWinner App, making it your ultimate betting companion.

Introduction to BetWinner

BetWinner is an online betting platform that has quickly gained popularity due to its wide range of betting opportunities across various sports and casino games. The site is known for its competitive odds, diverse betting options, and user-friendly interface. With the launch of the BetWinner App, users can take advantage of these offerings anywhere and anytime, ensuring a seamless betting experience.

Why BetWinner App?

The primary reason for the app’s popularity is its ability to provide a comprehensive betting experience in the palm of your hand. Whether you’re a fan of sports betting or prefer casino-style games, the BetWinner App caters to your needs efficiently. Here’s a look at some of the standout features:

User-Friendly Interface

The app boasts an intuitive design that makes navigation a breeze. You can effortlessly browse through various sports events, explore casino games, and manage your account with just a few taps on your screen. The clean layout ensures that even novice users can place bets confidently.

Wide Range of Betting Options

One of the major advantages of using the BetWinner App is the extensive array of betting options available. Users can place bets on a multitude of sports, ranging from popular games like football and basketball to niche sports. Additionally, the app features live betting, allowing users to place bets in real-time as events unfold.

Secure Transactions

Security is a primary concern for online bettors, and BetWinner takes this aspect seriously. The app uses advanced encryption technology to ensure that all transactions and user data are protected. Users can deposit and withdraw funds via various methods, including credit cards, e-wallets, and cryptocurrency.

BetWinner App Your Ultimate Betting Companion

Live Streaming and Updates

The BetWinner App offers live streaming of selected events, enabling users to watch games in real-time. Accompanied by live updates and statistics, the app provides bettors with the necessary information to make informed decisions for their wagers.

How to Download and Install the BetWinner App

For those looking to enhance their betting experience, downloading the BetWinner App is a straightforward process. Here’s a step-by-step guide:

  1. Visit the official BetWinner website or the link provided by your local BetWinner affiliate.
  2. Choose the download option suitable for your device (Android or iOS).
  3. For Android users, you may need to allow installations from unknown sources before the installation begins.
  4. Once downloaded, open the file and follow the on-screen instructions to install the app.
  5. iOS users can find the app in the App Store and download it like any other app.
  6. After installation, create an account or log in to begin betting!

Bonuses and Promotions

To attract new users and retain existing ones, BetWinner offers a variety of bonuses and promotions. These may include welcome bonuses for new users, deposit bonuses, and free bets. Regular promotions keep the excitement alive and encourage users to return to the app.

Customer Support

Reliable customer support is crucial for any online betting platform. BetWinner excels in providing a robust support system. Users can reach the support team via live chat, email, or phone. The app also features an FAQ section that offers quick answers to common queries, ensuring that users have all the information they need at their fingertips.

Conclusion

The BetWinner App is not just another betting platform; it is a comprehensive solution for sports and casino enthusiasts. With its user-friendly interface, a plethora of betting options, secure transactions, and stellar customer support, it is an excellent choice for both novice and seasoned bettors alike. Download the BetWinner App today and take your betting experience to the next level!


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