# Checkout - Blocks Registry This directory contains the Checkout Blocks Registry. This provides functions to **register new Inner Blocks** that can be inserted automatically, or optionally, within the Mini Cart, Cart and Checkout blocks in certain areas. Registered Inner Blocks can either be forced within the layout of the Cart/Checkout Block, or they can just be made available to merchants so they can be inserted manually. Inner Blocks registered in this way can also define a component to render on the frontend in place of the Block. ## Table of Contents - [How Inner Blocks Work](#how-inner-blocks-work) - [Inner Block Areas](#inner-block-areas) - [Registering a Block](#registering-a-block) - [Registering a Forced Block](#registering-a-forced-block) - [Passing attributes to your frontend block](#passing-attributes-to-your-frontend-block) - [Registering a Block Component](#registering-a-block-component) - [`registerCheckoutBlock( options )`](#registercheckoutblock-options-) - [Usage](#usage) - [Options](#options) - [`metadata` (object, required)](#metadata-object-required) - [`component` (function, required)](#component-function-required) - [`getRegisteredBlocks( blockName )`](#getregisteredblocks-blockname-) - [Usage](#usage-1) - [`hasInnerBlocks( blockName )`](#hasinnerblocks-blockname-) - [Usage](#usage-2) ## How Inner Blocks Work The Checkout Block has several areas in which inner blocks can be registered and added. Once registered, blocks can be inserted by merchants: ![Inner Block Inserter](inserter.png) If a block is **forced**, merchants won't see the option to insert the block, they will just see the block inserted by default, and they won't be able to remove it from the layout. ## Inner Block Areas Blocks can be registered within several different areas or parent blocks. Valid values at time of writing include: | Parent Block/Area | Description | | :----------------------------------------------- | :------------------------------------------------------------ | | `woocommerce/checkout-totals-block` | The right side of the checkout containing order totals. | | `woocommerce/checkout-fields-block` | The left side of the checkout containing checkout form steps. | | `woocommerce/checkout-contact-information-block` | Within the contact information form step. | | `woocommerce/checkout-shipping-address-block` | Within the shipping address form step. | | `woocommerce/checkout-billing-address-block` | Within the billing address form step. | | `woocommerce/checkout-shipping-methods-block` | Within the shipping methods form step. | | `woocommerce/checkout-payment-methods-block` | Within the payment methods form step. | See the `innerBlockAreas` typedef for the most up to date list of available areas. ## Registering a Block To register a checkout block, first, register your Block Type with WordPress using https://developer.wordpress.org/block-editor/reference-guides/block-api/block-registration/. We recommend using the `blocks.json` method to avoid repetition. When registering your block, you should also define the `parent` property to include a list of areas where your block will be available. For example: ```json { "name": "woocommerce/checkout-actions-block", "title": "Actions", "description": "Allow customers to place their order.", "category": "woocommerce", "parent": [ "woocommerce/checkout-fields-block" ] // ...snip } ``` ### Registering a Forced Block If you want your block to appear within the layout of the Checkout without merchant intervention, you can implement locking as follows: ```json { "name": "woocommerce/checkout-actions-block", "title": "Actions", "description": "Allow customers to place their order.", "category": "woocommerce", "parent": [ "woocommerce/checkout-fields-block" ], "attributes": { "lock": { "type": "object", "default": { "remove": true, "move": true } } } // ...snip } ``` In the above example, the inner block would be inserted automatically, and would not be movable or removable by the merchant. ### Passing attributes to your frontend block For your block to dynamically render on the frontend and have access to its own attributes, both the block name and the list of block attributes need to be passed via HTML `data-` attributes. - To render the block on the frontend, you need a `data-block-name` attribute on the HTML with your block name `namespace/block-name`. - To access your attributes on frontend, you need to save them as `data-*` attributes on the HTML. Blocks whose namespace is `woocommerce` or `woocommerce-checkout` will have this applied to them automatically, but you can also add this behaviour to your own namespace or individual blocks. To add this behavior to your namespace, you can use the `__experimental_woocommerce_blocks_add_data_attributes_to_namespace` filter: ```php add_filter( '__experimental_woocommerce_blocks_add_data_attributes_to_namespace', function ( $allowed_namespaces ) { $allowed_namespaces[] = 'namespace'; return $allowed_namespaces; }, 10, 1 ); ``` To add just a single block, you can use `__experimental_woocommerce_blocks_add_data_attributes_to_block` filter: ```php add_filter( '__experimental_woocommerce_blocks_add_data_attributes_to_block', function ( $allowed_blocks ) { $allowed_blocks[] = 'namespace/block-name'; return $allowed_blocks; }, 10, 1 ); ``` ### Registering a Block Component After registering your block, you need to define which component will replace your block on the frontend of the store. To do this, use the `registerCheckoutBlock` function from the checkout blocks registry. ## `registerCheckoutBlock( options )` This function registers a block and it's corresponding component with WooCommerce. The register function expects a JavaScript object with options specific to the block you are registering. ### Usage ```js // Aliased import import { registerCheckoutBlock } from '@woocommerce/blocks-checkout'; // Global import // const { registerCheckoutBlock } = wc.blocksCheckout; const options = { metadata: { name: 'namespace/block-name', parent: [ 'woocommerce/checkout-totals-block' ], }, component: () =>