--- name: wp-abilities-api description: "Use when working with the WordPress Abilities API (wp_register_ability, wp_register_ability_category, /wp-json/wp-abilities/v1/*, @wordpress/abilities) including defining abilities, categories, meta, REST exposure, and permissions checks for clients." compatibility: "Targets WordPress 6.9+ (PHP 7.2.24+). Filesystem-based agent with bash + node. Some workflows require WP-CLI." --- # WP Abilities API ## When to use Use this skill when the task involves: - registering abilities or ability categories in PHP, - exposing abilities to clients via REST (`wp-abilities/v1`), - consuming abilities in JS (notably `@wordpress/abilities`), - diagnosing “ability doesn’t show up” / “client can’t see ability” / “REST returns empty”. ## Inputs required - Repo root (run `wp-project-triage` first if you haven’t). - Target WordPress version(s) and whether this is WP core or a plugin/theme. - Where the change should live (plugin vs theme vs mu-plugin). ## Procedure ### 1) Confirm availability and version constraints - If this is WP core work, check `signals.isWpCoreCheckout` and `versions.wordpress.core`. - If the project targets WP < 6.9, you may need the Abilities API plugin/package rather than relying on core. ### 2) Find existing Abilities usage Search for these in the repo: - `wp_register_ability(` - `wp_register_ability_category(` - `wp_abilities_api_init` - `wp_abilities_api_categories_init` - `wp-abilities/v1` - `@wordpress/abilities` If none exist, decide whether you’re introducing Abilities API fresh (new registrations + client consumption) or only consuming. ### 3) Register categories (optional) If you need a logical grouping, register an ability category early (see `references/php-registration.md`). ### 4) Register abilities (PHP) Implement the ability in PHP registration with: - stable `id` (namespaced), - `label`/`description`, - `category`, - `meta`: - add `readonly: true` when the ability is informational, - set `show_in_rest: true` for abilities you want visible to clients. Use the documented init hooks for Abilities API registration so they load at the right time (see `references/php-registration.md`). ### 5) Confirm REST exposure - Verify the REST endpoints exist and return expected results (see `references/rest-api.md`). - If the client still can’t see the ability, confirm `meta.show_in_rest` is enabled and you’re querying the right endpoint. ### 6) Consume from JS (if needed) - Prefer `@wordpress/abilities` APIs for client-side access and checks. - Ensure build tooling includes the dependency and the project’s build pipeline bundles it. ## Verification - `wp-project-triage` indicates `signals.usesAbilitiesApi: true` after your change (if applicable). - REST check (in a WP environment): endpoints under `wp-abilities/v1` return your ability and category when expected. - If the repo has tests, add/update coverage near: - PHP: ability registration and meta exposure - JS: ability consumption and UI gating ## Failure modes / debugging - Ability never appears: - registration code not running (wrong hook / file not loaded), - missing `meta.show_in_rest`, - incorrect category/ID mismatch. - REST shows ability but JS doesn’t: - wrong REST base/namespace, - JS dependency not bundled, - caching (object/page caches) masking changes. ## Escalation - If you’re uncertain about version support, confirm target WP core versions and whether Abilities API is expected from core or as a plugin. - For canonical details, consult: - `references/rest-api.md` - `references/php-registration.md`