Você está visualizando atualmente WooCommerce: Move Sale Badge Beside Price @ Single Product Page

WooCommerce: Move Sale Badge Beside Price @ Single Product Page

  • Autor do post:
  • Categoria do post:Woocommerce
  • Tempo de leitura:4 minutos de leitura

On a default theme, such as Storefront, the single product page template is laid out so that the SALE badge comes first, on its own line, then comes the product title, the product price on its own line, the short description, the product’s stock availability and the add to cart button.

As you can see from the screenshot below, there is lots of white space on the right hand side, so for my new business line (WooCommerce Mini-Plugins, you somewhat guessed it, right?) I wanted to improve the single product page layout and move the SALE badge right beside the price, so that I could achieve two objectives: save some space, and also focus the customer attention on the product price as opposed on to the badge.

So, let’s see how I did it. Enjoy!

On the Storefront theme (as well as on other WooCommerce themes that don’t alter the single product page template), the SALE! badge appears above the product title. Instead, I want to move that beside the price to save some space.

PHP Snippet: Move Sale! Badge From Above The Title To Beside The Price @ WooCommerce Single Product Page

/** * @snippet Move Sale! Badge @ WooCommerce Single Product Page * @how-to Get CustomizeWoo.com FREE * @author Rodolfo Melogli * @compatible WooCommerce 7 * @donate $9 https://businessbloomer.com/bloomer-armada/ */ // REMOVE SALE BADGE FROM ITS ORIGINAL POSITION remove_action( ‘woocommerce_before_single_product_summary’, ‘woocommerce_show_product_sale_flash’, 10 ); // ADD SALE BADGE HTML BESIDE PRICE add_filter( ‘woocommerce_get_price_suffix’, ‘bbloomer_add_price_suffix_sale’, 9999, 4 ); function bbloomer_add_price_suffix_sale( $html, $product, $price, $qty ) { if ( ! is_admin() && is_object( $product ) && $product->is_on_sale() ) { $html .= wc_get_template_html( ‘single-product/sale-flash.php’ ); } return $html; }

Was this article helpful?

YesNo

Where to add this snippet?

You can place PHP snippets at the bottom of your child theme functions.php file (delete “?>” if you have it there). CSS, on the other hand, goes in your child theme style.css file. Make sure you know what you are doing when editing such files – if you need more guidance, please take a look at my free video tutorial “Where to Place WooCommerce Customization?”

Does this snippet (still) work?

Please let me know in the comments if everything worked as expected. I would be happy to revise the snippet if you report otherwise (please provide screenshots). I have tested this code with Storefront theme, the WooCommerce version listed above and a WordPress-friendly hosting on PHP 7.3.

If you think this code saved you time & money, feel free to join 14,000+ WooCommerce Weekly subscribers for blog post updates or 250+ Business Bloomer supporters for 365 days of WooCommerce benefits. Thank you in advance 🙂

Need Help with WooCommerce?

Check out these free video tutorials. You can learn how to customize WooCommerce without unnecessary plugins, how to properly configure the WooCommerce plugin settings and even how to master WooCommerce troubleshooting in case of a bug!

Rodolfo Melogli

Business Bloomer Founder

Author, WooCommerce expert and WordCamp speaker, Rodolfo has worked as an independent WooCommerce freelancer since 2011. His goal is to help entrepreneurs and developers overcome their WooCommerce nightmares. Rodolfo loves travelling, chasing tennis & soccer balls and, of course, wood fired oven pizza.

Follow @rmelogli

Post navigation

Source