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Home/ Questions/Q 535513
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T09:43:29+00:00 2026-05-13T09:43:29+00:00

I have a function whose purpose is to list the folders within the images

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I have a function whose purpose is to list the folders within the images directory of my wordpress theme. It works great when the user has installed wordpress in the root directory of the site. However, it fails if the user has installed wordpress in a folder under the root…

$mydir = get_dirs($_SERVER[‘DOCUMENT_ROOT’].’/wp-content/themes/mytheme/images’);

This function works fine as long as the wordpress is installed directly into the site’s root, such as site.com/index.php

However, this path method fails, if the user has installed their blog in a virtual directory. Example: site.com/somedirectory/index.php

Can someone help with a better method of determining the path of the $mydir?

It would be super simple if I could feed my function with the http address, but my function requires the path to the images directory as a server directory. Anyone know of a way to find the folders under a given directory using the http method instead? For example, I can get a reference to my theme’s images directory with…

$mydir = get_bloginfo(‘url’).’/wp-content/themes/mytheme/images’;

However, the function below, will not take a URL, it must be a physical file path to the chosen directory I want to parse. So I either need to replace it with a function that takes a URL or I need to find some way to convert the $mydir function to a physical path, or perhaps some other means.

Here is the function that I’m using for parsing the directory and assigning each folder to an array.

function get_dirs($path = '.') 
{
$dirs = array();
try
{
    foreach (new DirectoryIterator($path) as $file) 
    {
        if ($file->isDir() && !$file->isDot()) 
        {
        $dirs[] = $file->getFilename();
        }
    }
} 
catch(Exception $e) 
{
    //log exception or process silently
    //just for test
    echo "There is a problem inside the get_dirs function";
}
return $dirs;
}
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T09:43:29+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 9:43 am

    I don’t have WordPress installed here, but what if you put this in your functions.php located in your theme folder?

    function get_dir_path(){
        return dirname(__FILE__).'/images';
    }
    

    Then, instead of

    $mydir = get_bloginfo('url').'/wp-content/themes/mytheme/images';

    you just do

    $mydir = get_dir_path();

    FILE is an useful “magical” constant.

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