jreviews:permission:media.report
Filters whether a user has permission to report media as inappropriate.
You need to have a working knowledge of Hooks before you get started.
Fires when checking if user can report media abuse
Parameters
| Name | Type | Description |
|---|---|---|
$canReport |
bool |
Whether the user can report the media |
$user |
\JReviews\App\Models\User |
The user attempting to report |
$media |
\JReviews\App\Models\Media |
The media being reported |
$listingType |
\JReviews\App\Models\ListingType |
The listing type |
Boilerplate Code
Use the boilerplate code to start using the filter, and add your own logic to modify the first argument and return it.
fwd_add_filter('jreviews:permission:media.report', function($canReport, $user, $media, $listingType)
{
// Your code here
return $canReport;
}, 20, 4);
The , 20, N after your callback are the hook priority and the number of arguments your callback accepts. By default, a hook passes your callback only its first argument; for a filter, that is the value being filtered, so a simple function($value) { ... } needs nothing extra. If your callback declares more parameters, such as function($value, $listing) { ... }, you must add N (the parameter count, 2 here). Because N is the fourth argument to fwd_add_filter() or fwd_add_action(), you must also pass the priority (20 is the default). Leaving these off when your callback expects extra parameters causes a Too few arguments to function ... fatal error.
Source Files
app/Policies/MediaPolicy.php