namespace Elementor;
use Elementor\Core\Admin\Menu\Admin_Menu_Manager;
use Elementor\Core\Wp_Api;
use Elementor\Core\Admin\Admin;
use Elementor\Core\Breakpoints\Manager as Breakpoints_Manager;
use Elementor\Core\Common\App as CommonApp;
use Elementor\Core\Debug\Inspector;
use Elementor\Core\Documents_Manager;
use Elementor\Core\Experiments\Manager as Experiments_Manager;
use Elementor\Core\Kits\Manager as Kits_Manager;
use Elementor\Core\Editor\Editor;
use Elementor\Core\Files\Manager as Files_Manager;
use Elementor\Core\Files\Assets\Manager as Assets_Manager;
use Elementor\Core\Modules_Manager;
use Elementor\Core\Schemes\Manager as Schemes_Manager;
use Elementor\Core\Settings\Manager as Settings_Manager;
use Elementor\Core\Settings\Page\Manager as Page_Settings_Manager;
use Elementor\Core\Upgrade\Elementor_3_Re_Migrate_Globals;
use Elementor\Modules\History\Revisions_Manager;
use Elementor\Core\DynamicTags\Manager as Dynamic_Tags_Manager;
use Elementor\Core\Logger\Manager as Log_Manager;
use Elementor\Core\Page_Assets\Loader as Assets_Loader;
use Elementor\Modules\System_Info\Module as System_Info_Module;
use Elementor\Data\Manager as Data_Manager;
use Elementor\Data\V2\Manager as Data_Manager_V2;
use Elementor\Core\Common\Modules\DevTools\Module as Dev_Tools;
use Elementor\Core\Files\Uploads_Manager as Uploads_Manager;
if ( ! defined( 'ABSPATH' ) ) {
exit;
}
/**
* Elementor plugin.
*
* The main plugin handler class is responsible for initializing Elementor. The
* class registers and all the components required to run the plugin.
*
* @since 1.0.0
*/
class Plugin {
const ELEMENTOR_DEFAULT_POST_TYPES = [ 'page', 'post' ];
/**
* Instance.
*
* Holds the plugin instance.
*
* @since 1.0.0
* @access public
* @static
*
* @var Plugin
*/
public static $instance = null;
/**
* Database.
*
* Holds the plugin database handler which is responsible for communicating
* with the database.
*
* @since 1.0.0
* @access public
*
* @var DB
*/
public $db;
/**
* Controls manager.
*
* Holds the plugin controls manager handler is responsible for registering
* and initializing controls.
*
* @since 1.0.0
* @access public
*
* @var Controls_Manager
*/
public $controls_manager;
/**
* Documents manager.
*
* Holds the documents manager.
*
* @since 2.0.0
* @access public
*
* @var Documents_Manager
*/
public $documents;
/**
* Schemes manager.
*
* Holds the plugin schemes manager.
*
* @since 1.0.0
* @access public
*
* @var Schemes_Manager
*/
public $schemes_manager;
/**
* Elements manager.
*
* Holds the plugin elements manager.
*
* @since 1.0.0
* @access public
*
* @var Elements_Manager
*/
public $elements_manager;
/**
* Widgets manager.
*
* Holds the plugin widgets manager which is responsible for registering and
* initializing widgets.
*
* @since 1.0.0
* @access public
*
* @var Widgets_Manager
*/
public $widgets_manager;
/**
* Revisions manager.
*
* Holds the plugin revisions manager which handles history and revisions
* functionality.
*
* @since 1.0.0
* @access public
*
* @var Revisions_Manager
*/
public $revisions_manager;
/**
* Images manager.
*
* Holds the plugin images manager which is responsible for retrieving image
* details.
*
* @since 2.9.0
* @access public
*
* @var Images_Manager
*/
public $images_manager;
/**
* Maintenance mode.
*
* Holds the maintenance mode manager responsible for the "Maintenance Mode"
* and the "Coming Soon" features.
*
* @since 1.0.0
* @access public
*
* @var Maintenance_Mode
*/
public $maintenance_mode;
/**
* Page settings manager.
*
* Holds the page settings manager.
*
* @since 1.0.0
* @access public
*
* @var Page_Settings_Manager
*/
public $page_settings_manager;
/**
* Dynamic tags manager.
*
* Holds the dynamic tags manager.
*
* @since 1.0.0
* @access public
*
* @var Dynamic_Tags_Manager
*/
public $dynamic_tags;
/**
* Settings.
*
* Holds the plugin settings.
*
* @since 1.0.0
* @access public
*
* @var Settings
*/
public $settings;
/**
* Role Manager.
*
* Holds the plugin role manager.
*
* @since 2.0.0
* @access public
*
* @var Core\RoleManager\Role_Manager
*/
public $role_manager;
/**
* Admin.
*
* Holds the plugin admin.
*
* @since 1.0.0
* @access public
*
* @var Admin
*/
public $admin;
/**
* Tools.
*
* Holds the plugin tools.
*
* @since 1.0.0
* @access public
*
* @var Tools
*/
public $tools;
/**
* Preview.
*
* Holds the plugin preview.
*
* @since 1.0.0
* @access public
*
* @var Preview
*/
public $preview;
/**
* Editor.
*
* Holds the plugin editor.
*
* @since 1.0.0
* @access public
*
* @var Editor
*/
public $editor;
/**
* Frontend.
*
* Holds the plugin frontend.
*
* @since 1.0.0
* @access public
*
* @var Frontend
*/
public $frontend;
/**
* Heartbeat.
*
* Holds the plugin heartbeat.
*
* @since 1.0.0
* @access public
*
* @var Heartbeat
*/
public $heartbeat;
/**
* System info.
*
* Holds the system info data.
*
* @since 1.0.0
* @access public
*
* @var System_Info_Module
*/
public $system_info;
/**
* Template library manager.
*
* Holds the template library manager.
*
* @since 1.0.0
* @access public
*
* @var TemplateLibrary\Manager
*/
public $templates_manager;
/**
* Skins manager.
*
* Holds the skins manager.
*
* @since 1.0.0
* @access public
*
* @var Skins_Manager
*/
public $skins_manager;
/**
* Files manager.
*
* Holds the plugin files manager.
*
* @since 2.1.0
* @access public
*
* @var Files_Manager
*/
public $files_manager;
/**
* Assets manager.
*
* Holds the plugin assets manager.
*
* @since 2.6.0
* @access public
*
* @var Assets_Manager
*/
public $assets_manager;
/**
* Icons Manager.
*
* Holds the plugin icons manager.
*
* @access public
*
* @var Icons_Manager
*/
public $icons_manager;
/**
* WordPress widgets manager.
*
* Holds the WordPress widgets manager.
*
* @since 1.0.0
* @access public
*
* @var WordPress_Widgets_Manager
*/
public $wordpress_widgets_manager;
/**
* Modules manager.
*
* Holds the plugin modules manager.
*
* @since 1.0.0
* @access public
*
* @var Modules_Manager
*/
public $modules_manager;
/**
* Beta testers.
*
* Holds the plugin beta testers.
*
* @since 1.0.0
* @access public
*
* @var Beta_Testers
*/
public $beta_testers;
/**
* Inspector.
*
* Holds the plugin inspector data.
*
* @since 2.1.2
* @access public
*
* @var Inspector
*/
public $inspector;
/**
* @var Admin_Menu_Manager
*/
public $admin_menu_manager;
/**
* Common functionality.
*
* Holds the plugin common functionality.
*
* @since 2.3.0
* @access public
*
* @var CommonApp
*/
public $common;
/**
* Log manager.
*
* Holds the plugin log manager.
*
* @access public
*
* @var Log_Manager
*/
public $logger;
/**
* Dev tools.
*
* Holds the plugin dev tools.
*
* @access private
*
* @var Dev_Tools
*/
private $dev_tools;
/**
* Upgrade manager.
*
* Holds the plugin upgrade manager.
*
* @access public
*
* @var Core\Upgrade\Manager
*/
public $upgrade;
/**
* Tasks manager.
*
* Holds the plugin tasks manager.
*
* @var Core\Upgrade\Custom_Tasks_Manager
*/
public $custom_tasks;
/**
* Kits manager.
*
* Holds the plugin kits manager.
*
* @access public
*
* @var Core\Kits\Manager
*/
public $kits_manager;
/**
* @var \Elementor\Data\V2\Manager
*/
public $data_manager_v2;
/**
* Legacy mode.
*
* Holds the plugin legacy mode data.
*
* @access public
*
* @var array
*/
public $legacy_mode;
/**
* App.
*
* Holds the plugin app data.
*
* @since 3.0.0
* @access public
*
* @var App\App
*/
public $app;
/**
* WordPress API.
*
* Holds the methods that interact with WordPress Core API.
*
* @since 3.0.0
* @access public
*
* @var Wp_Api
*/
public $wp;
/**
* Experiments manager.
*
* Holds the plugin experiments manager.
*
* @since 3.1.0
* @access public
*
* @var Experiments_Manager
*/
public $experiments;
/**
* Uploads manager.
*
* Holds the plugin uploads manager responsible for handling file uploads
* that are not done with WordPress Media.
*
* @since 3.3.0
* @access public
*
* @var Uploads_Manager
*/
public $uploads_manager;
/**
* Breakpoints manager.
*
* Holds the plugin breakpoints manager.
*
* @since 3.2.0
* @access public
*
* @var Breakpoints_Manager
*/
public $breakpoints;
/**
* Assets loader.
*
* Holds the plugin assets loader responsible for conditionally enqueuing
* styles and script assets that were pre-enabled.
*
* @since 3.3.0
* @access public
*
* @var Assets_Loader
*/
public $assets_loader;
/**
* Clone.
*
* Disable class cloning and throw an error on object clone.
*
* The whole idea of the singleton design pattern is that there is a single
* object. Therefore, we don't want the object to be cloned.
*
* @access public
* @since 1.0.0
*/
public function __clone() {
_doing_it_wrong(
__FUNCTION__,
sprintf( 'Cloning instances of the singleton "%s" class is forbidden.', get_class( $this ) ), // phpcs:ignore WordPress.Security.EscapeOutput.OutputNotEscaped
'1.0.0'
);
}
/**
* Wakeup.
*
* Disable unserializing of the class.
*
* @access public
* @since 1.0.0
*/
public function __wakeup() {
_doing_it_wrong(
__FUNCTION__,
sprintf( 'Unserializing instances of the singleton "%s" class is forbidden.', get_class( $this ) ), // phpcs:ignore WordPress.Security.EscapeOutput.OutputNotEscaped
'1.0.0'
);
}
/**
* Instance.
*
* Ensures only one instance of the plugin class is loaded or can be loaded.
*
* @since 1.0.0
* @access public
* @static
*
* @return Plugin An instance of the class.
*/
public static function instance() {
if ( is_null( self::$instance ) ) {
self::$instance = new self();
/**
* Elementor loaded.
*
* Fires when Elementor was fully loaded and instantiated.
*
* @since 1.0.0
*/
do_action( 'elementor/loaded' );
}
return self::$instance;
}
/**
* Init.
*
* Initialize Elementor Plugin. Register Elementor support for all the
* supported post types and initialize Elementor components.
*
* @since 1.0.0
* @access public
*/
public function init() {
$this->add_cpt_support();
$this->init_components();
/**
* Elementor init.
*
* Fires when Elementor components are initialized.
*
* After Elementor finished loading but before any headers are sent.
*
* @since 1.0.0
*/
do_action( 'elementor/init' );
}
/**
* Get install time.
*
* Retrieve the time when Elementor was installed.
*
* @since 2.6.0
* @access public
* @static
*
* @return int Unix timestamp when Elementor was installed.
*/
public function get_install_time() {
$installed_time = get_option( '_elementor_installed_time' );
if ( ! $installed_time ) {
$installed_time = time();
update_option( '_elementor_installed_time', $installed_time );
}
return $installed_time;
}
/**
* @since 2.3.0
* @access public
*/
public function on_rest_api_init() {
// On admin/frontend sometimes the rest API is initialized after the common is initialized.
if ( ! $this->common ) {
$this->init_common();
}
}
/**
* Init components.
*
* Initialize Elementor components. Register actions, run setting manager,
* initialize all the components that run elementor, and if in admin page
* initialize admin components.
*
* @since 1.0.0
* @access private
*/
private function init_components() {
$this->experiments = new Experiments_Manager();
$this->breakpoints = new Breakpoints_Manager();
$this->inspector = new Inspector();
Settings_Manager::run();
$this->db = new DB();
$this->controls_manager = new Controls_Manager();
$this->documents = new Documents_Manager();
$this->kits_manager = new Kits_Manager();
$this->schemes_manager = new Schemes_Manager();
$this->elements_manager = new Elements_Manager();
$this->widgets_manager = new Widgets_Manager();
$this->skins_manager = new Skins_Manager();
$this->files_manager = new Files_Manager();
$this->assets_manager = new Assets_Manager();
$this->icons_manager = new Icons_Manager();
$this->settings = new Settings();
$this->tools = new Tools();
$this->editor = new Editor();
$this->preview = new Preview();
$this->frontend = new Frontend();
$this->maintenance_mode = new Maintenance_Mode();
$this->dynamic_tags = new Dynamic_Tags_Manager();
$this->modules_manager = new Modules_Manager();
$this->templates_manager = new TemplateLibrary\Manager();
$this->role_manager = new Core\RoleManager\Role_Manager();
$this->system_info = new System_Info_Module();
$this->revisions_manager = new Revisions_Manager();
$this->images_manager = new Images_Manager();
$this->wp = new Wp_Api();
$this->assets_loader = new Assets_Loader();
$this->uploads_manager = new Uploads_Manager();
$this->admin_menu_manager = new Admin_Menu_Manager();
$this->admin_menu_manager->register_actions();
User::init();
Api::init();
Tracker::init();
$this->upgrade = new Core\Upgrade\Manager();
$this->custom_tasks = new Core\Upgrade\Custom_Tasks_Manager();
$this->app = new App\App();
if ( is_admin() ) {
$this->heartbeat = new Heartbeat();
$this->wordpress_widgets_manager = new WordPress_Widgets_Manager();
$this->admin = new Admin();
$this->beta_testers = new Beta_Testers();
new Elementor_3_Re_Migrate_Globals();
}
}
/**
* @since 2.3.0
* @access public
*/
public function init_common() {
$this->common = new CommonApp();
$this->common->init_components();
}
/**
* Get Legacy Mode
*
* @since 3.0.0
* @deprecated 3.1.0 Use `Plugin::$instance->experiments->is_feature_active()` instead
*
* @param string $mode_name Optional. Default is null
*
* @return bool|bool[]
*/
public function get_legacy_mode( $mode_name = null ) {
self::$instance->modules_manager->get_modules( 'dev-tools' )->deprecation
->deprecated_function( __METHOD__, '3.1.0', 'Plugin::$instance->experiments->is_feature_active()' );
$legacy_mode = [
'elementWrappers' => ! self::$instance->experiments->is_feature_active( 'e_dom_optimization' ),
];
if ( ! $mode_name ) {
return $legacy_mode;
}
if ( isset( $legacy_mode[ $mode_name ] ) ) {
return $legacy_mode[ $mode_name ];
}
// If there is no legacy mode with the given mode name;
return false;
}
/**
* Add custom post type support.
*
* Register Elementor support for all the supported post types defined by
* the user in the admin screen and saved as `elementor_cpt_support` option
* in WordPress `$wpdb->options` table.
*
* If no custom post type selected, usually in new installs, this method
* will return the two default post types: `page` and `post`.
*
* @since 1.0.0
* @access private
*/
private function add_cpt_support() {
$cpt_support = get_option( 'elementor_cpt_support', self::ELEMENTOR_DEFAULT_POST_TYPES );
foreach ( $cpt_support as $cpt_slug ) {
add_post_type_support( $cpt_slug, 'elementor' );
}
}
/**
* Register autoloader.
*
* Elementor autoloader loads all the classes needed to run the plugin.
*
* @since 1.6.0
* @access private
*/
private function register_autoloader() {
require_once ELEMENTOR_PATH . '/includes/autoloader.php';
Autoloader::run();
}
/**
* Plugin Magic Getter
*
* @since 3.1.0
* @access public
*
* @param $property
* @return mixed
* @throws \Exception
*/
public function __get( $property ) {
if ( 'posts_css_manager' === $property ) {
self::$instance->modules_manager->get_modules( 'dev-tools' )->deprecation->deprecated_argument( 'Plugin::$instance->posts_css_manager', '2.7.0', 'Plugin::$instance->files_manager' );
return $this->files_manager;
}
if ( 'data_manager' === $property ) {
return Data_Manager::instance();
}
if ( property_exists( $this, $property ) ) {
throw new \Exception( 'Cannot access private property.' );
}
return null;
}
/**
* Plugin constructor.
*
* Initializing Elementor plugin.
*
* @since 1.0.0
* @access private
*/
private function __construct() {
$this->register_autoloader();
$this->logger = Log_Manager::instance();
$this->data_manager_v2 = Data_Manager_V2::instance();
Maintenance::init();
Compatibility::register_actions();
add_action( 'init', [ $this, 'init' ], 0 );
add_action( 'rest_api_init', [ $this, 'on_rest_api_init' ], 9 );
}
final public static function get_title() {
return esc_html__( 'Elementor', 'elementor' );
}
}
if ( ! defined( 'ELEMENTOR_TESTS' ) ) {
// In tests we run the instance manually.
Plugin::instance();
}
Dal matematico al futuro: come i minimi quadrati guidano le previsioni in Italia – Vitreo Retina Society
Nel complesso sviluppo scientifico e tecnologico italiano, i minimi quadrati si confermano uno strumento essenziale per la modellazione e la previsione di fenomeni complessi. Questo metodo, nato come fondamento della statistica matematica, oggi supporta decisioni strategiche in settori chiave come economia, infrastrutture e gestione del rischio, trasformando dati incerti in previsioni affidabili grazie a strumenti avanzati come Aviamasters.
Dalla teoria alla pratica: i minimi quadrati nel contesto italiano moderno
Il metodo dei minimi quadrati, sviluppato originariamente da Gauss e Legendre, trova oggi applicazione diretta nel contesto italiano attraverso sistemi di analisi avanzata. In ambito economico, ad esempio, consente di stimare trend di crescita con precisione, integrando dati regionali e settoriali per prevedere scenari futuri con un margine di errore ridotto. La semplicità matematica del principio — minimizzare la somma dei quadrati degli scarti — si traduce in modelli robusti, utilizzati da enti di statistica come ISTAT e da aziende industriali per ottimizzare la pianificazione.
Dall’algoritmo al modello: come i minimi quadrati strutturano le previsioni dinamiche
Nella pratica, i minimi quadrati non sono semplici calcoli, ma costituiscono la spina dorsale di modelli predittivi dinamici. In Italia, sistemi basati su questa metodologia sono integrati in piattaforme come Aviamasters, che combinano dati storici e trend in tempo reale. Ad esempio, nella gestione del traffico urbano, modelli predittivi costruiti con minimi quadrati consentono di anticipare congestioni e ottimizzare semafori, riducendo tempi di percorrenza e inquinamento nelle principali città come Roma, Milano e Torino.
Applicazioni concrete: i minimi quadrati nella pianificazione economica e gestione dei rischi
In ambito economico e finanziario, i minimi quadrati supportano strumenti di analisi del rischio creditizio e previsioni di mercato. In Italia, banche e istituzioni pubbliche utilizzano modelli statistici basati su questa tecnica per valutare la probabilità di default di imprese e progetti infrastrutturali. Un caso recente riguarda la stima dei flussi finanziari in progetti di transizione ecologica, dove la precisione dei minimi quadrati migliora la selezione degli investimenti sostenibili, guidando politiche regionali con dati concreti.
Precisione e robustezza: perché i minimi quadrati sono preferiti negli strumenti statistici italiani
La forza dei minimi quadrati risiede nella loro capacità di fornire stime efficienti anche in presenza di rumore nei dati. In Italia, dove la qualità delle informazioni è cruciale, questo metodo garantisce modelli stabili e riproducibili, richiesti da enti governativi e aziende. La minimizzazione degli scarti quadratici riduce l’impatto degli outlier, rendendo le previsioni più affidabili rispetto ad approcci meno strutturati. Questo è fondamentale in ambiti come la previsione demografica o la pianificazione energetica, dove piccole imprecisioni possono avere grandi conseguenze.
Evoluzione tecnologica: dal metodo classico alle nuove simulazioni con Aviamasters
Con l’avvento dell’intelligenza artificiale e del calcolo avanzato, i minimi quadrati non sono stati sostituiti, ma integrati in nuove architetture predittive. Aviamasters, piattaforma italiana leader in simulazioni statistiche, utilizza i minimi quadrati come base per algoritmi di machine learning, combinando modelli lineari tradizionali con tecniche di deep learning. Questo approccio ibrido, applicato in settori come l’ingegneria civile e la logistica, aumenta la capacità predittiva mantenendo la trasparenza e l’interpretabilità richieste dagli esperti italiani.
Guardare oltre i numeri: l’impatto dei minimi quadrati sulle decisioni strategiche nel settore pubblico e privato
Nel tessuto decisionale italiano, i minimi quadrati non sono solo uno strumento tecnico, ma un pilastro per scelte informate. Enti pubblici li usano per allocare risorse in modo equo, ad esempio nella distribuzione di fondi per la sanità regionale, mentre aziende private li impiegano per ottimizzare catene di fornitura e prevedere domanda. La chiarezza e la robustezza del metodo favoriscono la fiducia nei modelli, rendendo più semplice spiegare previsioni complesse a stakeholder e cittadini.
Indice dei contenuti
1. Dalla teoria alla pratica: i minimi quadrati nel contesto italiano moderno
2. Dall’algoritmo al modello: come i minimi quadrati strutturano le previsioni dinamiche
3. Applicazioni concrete: i minimi quadrati nella pianificazione economica e gestione dei rischi
4. Precisione e robustezza: perché i minimi quadrati sono preferiti negli strumenti statistici italiani
5. Evoluzione tecnologica: dal metodo classico alle nuove simulazioni con Aviamasters
6. Guardare oltre i numeri: l’impatto dei minimi quadrati sulle decisioni strategiche nel settore pubblico e privato
7. Conclusione: i minimi quadrati come fondamento del futuro delle previsioni in Italia, supportati da strumenti avanzati come Aviamasters
Indice dei contenuti 1. Dalla teoria alla pratica: i minimi quadrati nel contesto italiano moderno
2. Dall’algoritmo al modello: come i minimi quadrati strutturano le previsioni dinamiche
3. Applicazioni concrete: i minimi quadrati nella pianificazione economica e gestione dei rischi
4. Precisione e robustezza: perché i minimi quadrati sono preferiti negli strumenti statistici italiani
5. Evoluzione tecnologica: dal metodo classico alle nuove simulazioni con Aviamasters
6. Guardare oltre i numeri: l’impatto dei minimi quadrati sulle decisioni strategiche nel settore pubblico e privato
7. Conclusione: i minimi quadrati come fondamento del futuro delle previsioni in Italia, supportati da strumenti avanzati come Aviamasters