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README.txt in Fivestar 5

Same filename and directory in other branches
  1. 8 README.txt
  2. 6.2 README.txt
  3. 6 README.txt
  4. 7.2 README.txt
The Five Star voting module adds a clean, attractive voting widget to nodes in Drupal 5. It features:

 * jQuery rollover effects and AJAX no-reload voting
 * Customizable star sets
 * Graceful degradation to an HTML rating form when JavaScript is turned off
 * Per-nodetype configurability
 * Support for anonymous voters
 * Spam protection to keep users from filling your DB with bogus votes
 * Easy-to-use integration with Views module for lists sorted by rating, or filtered by min/max ratings
 * A Fivestar CCK field for use in custom node types
 * An easy-to-use Form API element type for use in other modules

Fivestar was designed by Nate Haug and Jeff Eaton.

This Module Made by Robots: http://www.lullabot.com


Dependencies
------------
 * votingapi

Fivestar also provides additional features for both the CCK and Views modules.

Install
-------
Installing the Five Star voting module is simple:

1) Copy the fivestar folder to the modules folder in your installation.

2) Enable the module using Administer -> Modules (/admin/build/modules)

Note: Aggressive caching will complain that fivestar doesn't work, but it
actually causes no problems. To improve performance, the module implements
hook_init() -- and the caching advisor screen uses that as the only metric to
determine whether a module will work with the caching system. Activate it
without fear, friends -- Fivestar will continue to hum happily along.

Configuration for Simple Rating
-------------------------------

Fivestar has two completely separate modes of operation. The first is letting an
end-user rate a piece of content. The settings for this are on the content type
settings page. These settings let you expose a rating widget when viewing the
node, not editing it. Clicking on the widget registers a vote for that node, and
never anything else.

The configuration for Fivestar is spread between the content type settings page,
Fivestar site settings page, and access permissions. To configure:

1) Configure the site-wide setting for Fivestar, Administer -> Settings ->
   Fivestar.

2) Activate voting on each content type. For example, if you want Fivestar to
   appear on story nodes, use Administer -> Content Management ->
   Content Types -> Story, and check the "Enable Five Star rating" box under
   the "Five Star ratings" heading. Repeat for each content type desired.

3) Enable anonymous voting.
   If you want to allow anonymous voting, you'll need to set permissions for
   that. Use Administer -> User Management -> Access Control, and check the
   "rate content" and "view ratings" checkboxes for the roles you'd like.
   You'll find these permission items under the "fivestar module" heading.

Configuration for Reviews of Content
------------------------------------

Fivestar can be used to quickly setup a rating system for your site visitors to
review a piece of content. When enabling the Comment widget, visitors will
submit a rating on the *original piece of content* along with their comment.
Visitors will not be rating the comments themselves. Fivestar does not allow for
the rating of comments.

1) If it's not already enabled, turn on comment module at Administer ->
   Site Building -> Modules.

2) Visit the content type you want to enable reviews, such as Administer ->
   Content Management -> Content Types -> Story, and select an option under
   the "Comment widget" section.

Configuration as a CCK field / Advanced Rating
----------------------------------------------

Fivestar has extensive CCK support, which makes it so that the user is presented
with a widget to rate some node with the widget while editing a node. It does
not necessary rate the current node, nor does it rate anything if no value is
entered in the Node ID field when configuring the CCK field. The value is
saved in the node (so when you edit it it is still there), but no vote is
registered in VotingAPI without the Node ID field filled out.

An example of a situation where you might want to use the CCK fivestar field is
creating a node type called 'review'. This review type would let users rate
some particular node, and accompany their rating with a review. This could be
combined with a standard rating on the target node, so that some users could
rate the target node using the simple method, or write a complete review to
accompany their rating.

To configure a CCK field for rating a node while creating a new 'review' node:

1) Create a new node type called 'review' at Administer -> Content Management ->
Content Types. Configure the type. Do NOT set any fivestar settings on the
content type form! We don't want users to actually be able to rate the reviews
themselves!

2) Edit your new content type, then click on the "Add Field" tab while on the
content type form. Add a field called 'rating' to your new type, make it of type
Fivestar Rating with the Stars radio button.

3) Configure the rating widget to your liking. Most field have help text which
explain their purpose. The Node ID field is the most important field on the page
which determines exactly what node will receive the value of the rating. In a
realy simple case, you could just enter the value 10 to always rate on the same
node with nid = 10. Usually you'll need to enter PHP code to dynamically select
what node you want to rate.

A common scenario is using fivestar with nodecomments to make reviews. If using
nodecomments a separate checkbox appears the Node ID field to allow you easily
select the nodecomment parent as the target of the vote.

Save your field. Now when making new nodes of type 'review', the user will
select a star that will register a vote on the value of the Node ID field.

Views Integration
-----------------
Fivestar depends on the views integration provided by VotinAPI, but adds some
special features to make it work specifically with Fivestar. To display Fivestar
ratings in a view, select the "VotingAPI percent vote result" from the list of
available Fields. This will display the average vote for nodes. Then choose
"Fivestar rating" from the Handler options for the field and the averages will
be displayed as Fivestar ratings.

Fivestar also provides handling for the display of Fivestar CCK fields, they are
in the Field list under "Fivestar Rating: [Field name]".

Creating a Fivestar Set
-----------------------

1. Open your favorite image editor and create an image that is 3 times as high as it is wide.
   The default size for Fivestar (and the easiest to work with) is 16x48 pixels.

2. Setup guides at 16 pixels and 32 pixels. This splits your canvas into thirds.

3. Create a star icon in the top third. When satisfied, copy it into the middle and bottom
   thirds of the image. Change the middle and bottom copies to your liking. Fivestar will
   use the top, middle, and bottom images for each state of the star.
   
   Top      -> Off
   Middle   -> On
   Bottom   -> Hover

4. Save your image as "star.png" in a new directory. The name of your directory will be the label
   for your set of stars, spaces are not allowed.

5. Do the same thing for a cancel image, only there are only 2 states for a cancel image, so your
   image will be 16 pixels by 32pixels. Setup a guide at 16 pixels so your canvas is split in half.

6. Create a cancel icon in the top half. Then duplicate it into the bottom half. The cancel states
   are simply Off and Hover.

   Top      -> Off
   Bottom   -> Hover

7. Save your cancel image as "cancel.png" in the directory create in step 4.

8. Create the CSS stylesheet. The easiest way to make this stylesheet is to copy an existing CSS
   file from another set of stars. The "Basic" set provides an excellent example for a 16x16 star,
   because it only changes the background image as necessary. If you're making a larger or smaller
   size for your stars than 16x16 pixels, the "Minimal" and "Outline" sets make for a good example.

Creating a Color Enhanced Fivestar Set
--------------------------------------

If contributing your set of stars back to the community, creating a color enhanced version of your
widget is an excellent way to make the stars usable by a large audience. By slightly extending a
basic widget, you can make allow users to customize the colors in your Fivestar set.

1. Similar to a basic star set, create a new image that will be split in thirds vertically. However,
   color enhanced sets of stars are also split in half horizontally, so you'll actually create 6
   stars inside of a single image. The default canvas size for a 16x16 star then is 32x48 pixels.

2. Setup guides at 16 and 32 pixels on the y-axis and another grid at 16 pixels on the x-axis.

3. Using the same method as a basic widget, create stars for Off, On, and Hover states on the right
   side of your image. The stars on the right side of the image will be used as an *overlay*.
   While it's okay to use color for the overlay, you'll generally only use white and black to add
   highlights or shadows to the colors the end-user will choose from the Fivestar settings page.

4. Create matching stars on the left side of the image (also for Off, On, and Hover states). The
   stars on the left side will be used as the *color mask*. The stars should be entirely black
   (transparency is okay).

5. Save your image as star-template.png, *make sure to format it as a 24-bit PNG*. Even though the
   template is a 24-bit PNG (which isn't compatible with IE6), the generated images can be either
   an 8-bit PNG (with a matte) or 24-bit PNG (if no matte is chosen).

6. Repeat steps 1 through 6 for the cancel image, only with a 32x32 pixel image for the Off and
   Hover states. Save the final images as cancel-template.png and cancel.png.

7. The two template.png files will tell Fivestar that the set is "color enhanced" and allow users to
   choose new colors for their stars.

Contributing
------------
Have a sweet set of stars you'd like to contribute to the Fivestar module?
Post them to the Fivestar issue queue: http://drupal.org/project/issues/fivestar

Support
-------
If you experience a problem with fivestar or have a problem, file a
request or issue on the fivestar queue at
http://drupal.org/project/issues/fivestar. DO NOT POST IN THE FORUMS. Posting in
the issue queues is a direct line of communication with the module authors.

File

README.txt
View source
  1. The Five Star voting module adds a clean, attractive voting widget to nodes in Drupal 5. It features:
  2. * jQuery rollover effects and AJAX no-reload voting
  3. * Customizable star sets
  4. * Graceful degradation to an HTML rating form when JavaScript is turned off
  5. * Per-nodetype configurability
  6. * Support for anonymous voters
  7. * Spam protection to keep users from filling your DB with bogus votes
  8. * Easy-to-use integration with Views module for lists sorted by rating, or filtered by min/max ratings
  9. * A Fivestar CCK field for use in custom node types
  10. * An easy-to-use Form API element type for use in other modules
  11. Fivestar was designed by Nate Haug and Jeff Eaton.
  12. This Module Made by Robots: http://www.lullabot.com
  13. Dependencies
  14. ------------
  15. * votingapi
  16. Fivestar also provides additional features for both the CCK and Views modules.
  17. Install
  18. -------
  19. Installing the Five Star voting module is simple:
  20. 1) Copy the fivestar folder to the modules folder in your installation.
  21. 2) Enable the module using Administer -> Modules (/admin/build/modules)
  22. Note: Aggressive caching will complain that fivestar doesn't work, but it
  23. actually causes no problems. To improve performance, the module implements
  24. hook_init() -- and the caching advisor screen uses that as the only metric to
  25. determine whether a module will work with the caching system. Activate it
  26. without fear, friends -- Fivestar will continue to hum happily along.
  27. Configuration for Simple Rating
  28. -------------------------------
  29. Fivestar has two completely separate modes of operation. The first is letting an
  30. end-user rate a piece of content. The settings for this are on the content type
  31. settings page. These settings let you expose a rating widget when viewing the
  32. node, not editing it. Clicking on the widget registers a vote for that node, and
  33. never anything else.
  34. The configuration for Fivestar is spread between the content type settings page,
  35. Fivestar site settings page, and access permissions. To configure:
  36. 1) Configure the site-wide setting for Fivestar, Administer -> Settings ->
  37. Fivestar.
  38. 2) Activate voting on each content type. For example, if you want Fivestar to
  39. appear on story nodes, use Administer -> Content Management ->
  40. Content Types -> Story, and check the "Enable Five Star rating" box under
  41. the "Five Star ratings" heading. Repeat for each content type desired.
  42. 3) Enable anonymous voting.
  43. If you want to allow anonymous voting, you'll need to set permissions for
  44. that. Use Administer -> User Management -> Access Control, and check the
  45. "rate content" and "view ratings" checkboxes for the roles you'd like.
  46. You'll find these permission items under the "fivestar module" heading.
  47. Configuration for Reviews of Content
  48. ------------------------------------
  49. Fivestar can be used to quickly setup a rating system for your site visitors to
  50. review a piece of content. When enabling the Comment widget, visitors will
  51. submit a rating on the *original piece of content* along with their comment.
  52. Visitors will not be rating the comments themselves. Fivestar does not allow for
  53. the rating of comments.
  54. 1) If it's not already enabled, turn on comment module at Administer ->
  55. Site Building -> Modules.
  56. 2) Visit the content type you want to enable reviews, such as Administer ->
  57. Content Management -> Content Types -> Story, and select an option under
  58. the "Comment widget" section.
  59. Configuration as a CCK field / Advanced Rating
  60. ----------------------------------------------
  61. Fivestar has extensive CCK support, which makes it so that the user is presented
  62. with a widget to rate some node with the widget while editing a node. It does
  63. not necessary rate the current node, nor does it rate anything if no value is
  64. entered in the Node ID field when configuring the CCK field. The value is
  65. saved in the node (so when you edit it it is still there), but no vote is
  66. registered in VotingAPI without the Node ID field filled out.
  67. An example of a situation where you might want to use the CCK fivestar field is
  68. creating a node type called 'review'. This review type would let users rate
  69. some particular node, and accompany their rating with a review. This could be
  70. combined with a standard rating on the target node, so that some users could
  71. rate the target node using the simple method, or write a complete review to
  72. accompany their rating.
  73. To configure a CCK field for rating a node while creating a new 'review' node:
  74. 1) Create a new node type called 'review' at Administer -> Content Management ->
  75. Content Types. Configure the type. Do NOT set any fivestar settings on the
  76. content type form! We don't want users to actually be able to rate the reviews
  77. themselves!
  78. 2) Edit your new content type, then click on the "Add Field" tab while on the
  79. content type form. Add a field called 'rating' to your new type, make it of type
  80. Fivestar Rating with the Stars radio button.
  81. 3) Configure the rating widget to your liking. Most field have help text which
  82. explain their purpose. The Node ID field is the most important field on the page
  83. which determines exactly what node will receive the value of the rating. In a
  84. realy simple case, you could just enter the value 10 to always rate on the same
  85. node with nid = 10. Usually you'll need to enter PHP code to dynamically select
  86. what node you want to rate.
  87. A common scenario is using fivestar with nodecomments to make reviews. If using
  88. nodecomments a separate checkbox appears the Node ID field to allow you easily
  89. select the nodecomment parent as the target of the vote.
  90. Save your field. Now when making new nodes of type 'review', the user will
  91. select a star that will register a vote on the value of the Node ID field.
  92. Views Integration
  93. -----------------
  94. Fivestar depends on the views integration provided by VotinAPI, but adds some
  95. special features to make it work specifically with Fivestar. To display Fivestar
  96. ratings in a view, select the "VotingAPI percent vote result" from the list of
  97. available Fields. This will display the average vote for nodes. Then choose
  98. "Fivestar rating" from the Handler options for the field and the averages will
  99. be displayed as Fivestar ratings.
  100. Fivestar also provides handling for the display of Fivestar CCK fields, they are
  101. in the Field list under "Fivestar Rating: [Field name]".
  102. Creating a Fivestar Set
  103. -----------------------
  104. 1. Open your favorite image editor and create an image that is 3 times as high as it is wide.
  105. The default size for Fivestar (and the easiest to work with) is 16x48 pixels.
  106. 2. Setup guides at 16 pixels and 32 pixels. This splits your canvas into thirds.
  107. 3. Create a star icon in the top third. When satisfied, copy it into the middle and bottom
  108. thirds of the image. Change the middle and bottom copies to your liking. Fivestar will
  109. use the top, middle, and bottom images for each state of the star.
  110. Top -> Off
  111. Middle -> On
  112. Bottom -> Hover
  113. 4. Save your image as "star.png" in a new directory. The name of your directory will be the label
  114. for your set of stars, spaces are not allowed.
  115. 5. Do the same thing for a cancel image, only there are only 2 states for a cancel image, so your
  116. image will be 16 pixels by 32pixels. Setup a guide at 16 pixels so your canvas is split in half.
  117. 6. Create a cancel icon in the top half. Then duplicate it into the bottom half. The cancel states
  118. are simply Off and Hover.
  119. Top -> Off
  120. Bottom -> Hover
  121. 7. Save your cancel image as "cancel.png" in the directory create in step 4.
  122. 8. Create the CSS stylesheet. The easiest way to make this stylesheet is to copy an existing CSS
  123. file from another set of stars. The "Basic" set provides an excellent example for a 16x16 star,
  124. because it only changes the background image as necessary. If you're making a larger or smaller
  125. size for your stars than 16x16 pixels, the "Minimal" and "Outline" sets make for a good example.
  126. Creating a Color Enhanced Fivestar Set
  127. --------------------------------------
  128. If contributing your set of stars back to the community, creating a color enhanced version of your
  129. widget is an excellent way to make the stars usable by a large audience. By slightly extending a
  130. basic widget, you can make allow users to customize the colors in your Fivestar set.
  131. 1. Similar to a basic star set, create a new image that will be split in thirds vertically. However,
  132. color enhanced sets of stars are also split in half horizontally, so you'll actually create 6
  133. stars inside of a single image. The default canvas size for a 16x16 star then is 32x48 pixels.
  134. 2. Setup guides at 16 and 32 pixels on the y-axis and another grid at 16 pixels on the x-axis.
  135. 3. Using the same method as a basic widget, create stars for Off, On, and Hover states on the right
  136. side of your image. The stars on the right side of the image will be used as an *overlay*.
  137. While it's okay to use color for the overlay, you'll generally only use white and black to add
  138. highlights or shadows to the colors the end-user will choose from the Fivestar settings page.
  139. 4. Create matching stars on the left side of the image (also for Off, On, and Hover states). The
  140. stars on the left side will be used as the *color mask*. The stars should be entirely black
  141. (transparency is okay).
  142. 5. Save your image as star-template.png, *make sure to format it as a 24-bit PNG*. Even though the
  143. template is a 24-bit PNG (which isn't compatible with IE6), the generated images can be either
  144. an 8-bit PNG (with a matte) or 24-bit PNG (if no matte is chosen).
  145. 6. Repeat steps 1 through 6 for the cancel image, only with a 32x32 pixel image for the Off and
  146. Hover states. Save the final images as cancel-template.png and cancel.png.
  147. 7. The two template.png files will tell Fivestar that the set is "color enhanced" and allow users to
  148. choose new colors for their stars.
  149. Contributing
  150. ------------
  151. Have a sweet set of stars you'd like to contribute to the Fivestar module?
  152. Post them to the Fivestar issue queue: http://drupal.org/project/issues/fivestar
  153. Support
  154. -------
  155. If you experience a problem with fivestar or have a problem, file a
  156. request or issue on the fivestar queue at
  157. http://drupal.org/project/issues/fivestar. DO NOT POST IN THE FORUMS. Posting in
  158. the issue queues is a direct line of communication with the module authors.