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SEARCHREPLACEDB2
As its GitHub documentation notes, the single-file PHP script searchreplacedb2 is “not terribly pretty, but it’s portable and it solves an important problem that comes up whenever WordPress sites get renamed.”. I’ll go further: There have been times when I couldn’t have done my job without searchreplacedb2, or at least something that does exactly what it does. USING WORDPRESS: ADD SCRIPT TO HEADER • WPSHOUT There’s a tricky thing about this idea, “WordPress add header script” I have written down as our topic today. That problem is that “adding a header script” can mean a bunch of things. In our case, I’ll be explaining how a WordPress user (who may be a developer, but doesn’t necessarily understand code that thoroughly) can add a JavaScript file or code to their pages. HOW TO INSTALL A NEW WORDPRESS THEME USING A ZIP FILE To install a new WordPress theme, click the “Add New” button just to the left of the page title, at the top-left of the screen. This is mostly a search of the themes you can effortless install from WordPress.org. To install your theme using a Zip file, you’ll want to click the “Upload Theme” next to SITEGROUND VS. KINSTA: LEARN WHICH HOST IS RIGHT FOR YOU 1. You’re not highly budget-conscious. Kinsta will cost quite a bit more than SiteGround as your traffic scales, but for larger projects both are cheap enough not to worry. 2. You’re focused on well-optimized WordPress hosting. As WordPress’s best managed host, Kinsta outperforms SiteGround on speed, even on a per-dollar basis. PHP DEVELOPMENT BASICS: HOW TO INCLUDE PHP IN HTML How to Include PHP in HTML: File Types and Other Considerations. By default, you can’t use PHP in HTML files, meaning files that end with .html.. The first thing to know is that, by default, you can’t use PHP in HTML files, meaning files that end with .html.It’s possible to configure your server to allow PHP in .html files, but that’s outside our scope—so for now, just remember that HOW TO CREATE HIERARCHICAL CUSTOM POST TYPES IN From the linked article: To make a hierarchical custom post type, you have to have the ‘ page-attributes ‘ set in the ‘ supports ‘ array and the ‘ hierarchical ‘ flag set to true. Please read the full linked article for details. It helped me out of a tight spot on aproject where I
HOW TO FIX WRONG-SIZED IMAGES IN WORDPRESS • WPSHOUT One of the things that often confuses people new to WordPress (and web-tech in general) is that you can rely on WordPress to keep track of your images. Set some as featured, add them in your posts, all of that stuff. If you don’t know that, it’s so cool to discover. But then a second thing happens: you use this power, but then you change themes (or something else) and all your images are HOW TO CREATE A HERO IMAGE IN WORDPRESS WITH BEAVER This is a guide to creating a hero image on a WordPress site using the Beaver Builder plugin.. What a Hero Image Is. Hero images (and hero sections more broadly) are the large, “full-bleed” sections you see at the top of many website homepages and landing pages. HOW TO SET YOUR SITE ICON (FAVICON) IN WORDPRESS • WPSHOUT Open the “ Site Identity ” panel by clicking it from the initial listing panel. Open the “ Site Icon ” section. If it hasn’t been used before on your site you’ll click the “Select Image” button. There you will select an image already in your image library, or have the ability to upload a new one. (If you’ve ever used WordPress WHERE ARE WORDPRESS PAGES STORED & HOW TO FIND THEM • WPSHOUT It’s a very reasonable question: where are WordPress pages stored? There are a lot of ways to answer it though. Without getting too pedantic, we really need to understand a few different levels of the questions to really give a good answer. In this Quick Guide we’ll cover a few different of the answers you may be seeking.SEARCHREPLACEDB2
As its GitHub documentation notes, the single-file PHP script searchreplacedb2 is “not terribly pretty, but it’s portable and it solves an important problem that comes up whenever WordPress sites get renamed.”. I’ll go further: There have been times when I couldn’t have done my job without searchreplacedb2, or at least something that does exactly what it does. USING WORDPRESS: ADD SCRIPT TO HEADER • WPSHOUT There’s a tricky thing about this idea, “WordPress add header script” I have written down as our topic today. That problem is that “adding a header script” can mean a bunch of things. In our case, I’ll be explaining how a WordPress user (who may be a developer, but doesn’t necessarily understand code that thoroughly) can add a JavaScript file or code to their pages. HOW TO INSTALL A NEW WORDPRESS THEME USING A ZIP FILE To install a new WordPress theme, click the “Add New” button just to the left of the page title, at the top-left of the screen. This is mostly a search of the themes you can effortless install from WordPress.org. To install your theme using a Zip file, you’ll want to click the “Upload Theme” next to SITEGROUND VS. KINSTA: LEARN WHICH HOST IS RIGHT FOR YOU 1. You’re not highly budget-conscious. Kinsta will cost quite a bit more than SiteGround as your traffic scales, but for larger projects both are cheap enough not to worry. 2. You’re focused on well-optimized WordPress hosting. As WordPress’s best managed host, Kinsta outperforms SiteGround on speed, even on a per-dollar basis. PHP DEVELOPMENT BASICS: HOW TO INCLUDE PHP IN HTML How to Include PHP in HTML: File Types and Other Considerations. By default, you can’t use PHP in HTML files, meaning files that end with .html.. The first thing to know is that, by default, you can’t use PHP in HTML files, meaning files that end with .html.It’s possible to configure your server to allow PHP in .html files, but that’s outside our scope—so for now, just remember that HOW TO CREATE HIERARCHICAL CUSTOM POST TYPES IN From the linked article: To make a hierarchical custom post type, you have to have the ‘ page-attributes ‘ set in the ‘ supports ‘ array and the ‘ hierarchical ‘ flag set to true. Please read the full linked article for details. It helped me out of a tight spot on aproject where I
HOW TO FIX WRONG-SIZED IMAGES IN WORDPRESS • WPSHOUT One of the things that often confuses people new to WordPress (and web-tech in general) is that you can rely on WordPress to keep track of your images. Set some as featured, add them in your posts, all of that stuff. If you don’t know that, it’s so cool to discover. But then a second thing happens: you use this power, but then you change themes (or something else) and all your images are HOW TO CREATE A HERO IMAGE IN WORDPRESS WITH BEAVER This is a guide to creating a hero image on a WordPress site using the Beaver Builder plugin.. What a Hero Image Is. Hero images (and hero sections more broadly) are the large, “full-bleed” sections you see at the top of many website homepages and landing pages. IN-DEPTH WORDPRESS TUTORIALS FOR DEVELOPERS • WPSHOUT Welcome to WPShout, a website about WordPress development. We cover making the most of WordPress in tutorials, news stories, and other resources. Below, you can browse some of the great stuff we’ve published recently. If you’re ready to take the next step in your WordPress development journey, now might be the time to look at HOW TO TEST YOUR WEBSITE FOR ACCESSIBILITY • WPSHOUT To test embedded media for accessibility, you will need to visit the front end of your website and visually observe its appearance. Review the transition and timing of sliders and videos. Ensure that videos have closed captions or separate transcripts. Test each of the embeds for screen reader and keyboard navigation. HOW TO SELECTIVELY SHARE A DRAFT IN WORDPRESS • WPSHOUT In the upper right “Publish” metabox, if you’ve successfully activated the plugin, you’ll see a new option: “Enable public preview.”. Check the box to the left of that text. After you check that box, a text field will drop down with a URL inside of it. That’s your preview link. To share your draft and let the guest seeit,
HOW TO FIX WRONG-SIZED IMAGES IN WORDPRESS • WPSHOUT One of the things that often confuses people new to WordPress (and web-tech in general) is that you can rely on WordPress to keep track of your images. Set some as featured, add them in your posts, all of that stuff. If you don’t know that, it’s so cool to discover. But then a second thing happens: you use this power, but then you change themes (or something else) and all your images are HOW TO CLEAR YOUR SITEGROUND CACHE • WPSHOUT One reason we love SiteGround is its comprehensive WordPress caching solution, SuperCacher. It sits on SiteGround’s own servers so it’s much faster and better tailored to your site than plugin-based solutions like WP Super Cache, and so if you’re using it you basically don’t need any other WordPress caching solution. This is one the great thing we love so much about SiteGround shared LEARNING PHP: CONCATENATE STRINGS AND VARIABLES EFFICIENTLY A slightly weird term you'll hear people use around PHP: "concatenate." I still remember the first time I heard that word, having no earthly idea what it HOW TO LINK FROM A WORDPRESS MENU TO A PAGE SECTION Sometimes you might want your WordPress navigation menu items to link directly to a page section that sits in the middle of a larger page, rather than simply to the top of the page. For example: instead of creating a nav menu link to a Contact page, how do I create a menu link to the Contact section of my homepage?. Being able to create WordPress menu links to page sections is especially THE THREE DEVELOPMENT PARADIGMS: PROCEDURAL, OBJECT My hope is that I’ve driven home three essential points today: All three paradigms — functional, OOP, and procedural — are good and useful for a WordPress developer. All three paradigms have strengths and weaknesses. All three paradigms can LINKS ARCHIVE • PAGE 40 OF 85 • WPSHOUT In Wednesday’s link post, I mentioned that VVV is another way to get a Vagrant box working for WordPress development.That reminded of this recent tutorial from the folks at Tuts+ about that very topic. The article goes into great depth of setting up VirtualBox and Vagrant, so if this is something you’ve thought of before but never followed-through with, it may be exactly what you need! HOW TO CHANGE YOUR META TITLE AND META DESCRIPTION IN If you’re trying to increase traffic to your website and improve your SEO, Yoast SEO for WordPress has quickly become the go-to SEO solution for most WordPress developers. It’s a multifaceted SEO plugin that’s full of features that make optimization easier to keep up with! One of our favorite features is the snippet editor, which gives you the ability to edit your meta title and meta Skip to nav menu Skip to content Serious about WordPress development? Check out our awesome premium courses!* __Articles
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* Course: Learn WordPress Development * Complete Guide to WordPress Security * WordPress Page Builders, Reviewed IN-DEPTH WORDPRESS TUTORIALS FOR DEVELOPERS Fred Meyer and David Hayes, coeditors Welcome to WPShout, a website about WordPress development. Below, you'll find some of our favorite WordPress development tutorials, news, and resources. Whether you're just getting started or need a specific WordPress coding tutorial, you'll find we tackle technical topics in an easy-to-understand, friendly way. You'll find some of our favorite WordPress tutorials below, and new posts most weekdays. Oh, and we're Fred and David—we're the WordPress developers who run this site. P.S. If you haven't already subscribed for our excellent weekly newsletter, then now's the time. Don't miss out on the very latest Get the very latest WordPress development tutorials, tricks and newsin your inbox.
Yes, I Want Access!No Thanks OUR "START HERE" GUIDES These core WordPress development tutorials will get you started on theright foot.
LEARN WORDPRESS DEVELOPMENT: THE BASIC COURSE By Fred Meyer | October 10, 2019 WORDPRESS PAGE BUILDERS, REVIEWED: BEAVER BUILDER, DIVI BUILDER, WPBAKERY PAGE BUILDER, ELEMENTOR By Fred Meyer | May 3, 2018 SITEGROUND VS. KINSTA: CHOOSING BETWEEN THE TWO BEST WORDPRESS HOSTS By Fred Meyer | February 5, 2020 THE BEST WORDPRESS HOSTING IN 2020: AN HONEST GUIDE By Fred Meyer | January 22, 2020 SITEGROUND REVIEW: WHY SITEGROUND SHOULD BE YOUR FIRST CHOICE FOR SHARED HOSTING IN 2020 By Fred Meyer | February 4, 2020 BECOME A FREELANCE WORDPRESS DEVELOPER: HOW TO MAKE A CAREER OF IT By Fred Meyer | August 27, 2019RECENTLY PUBLISHED
Check out our most recently published WordPress development tutorials, thoughts and advice on working as a WordPress developer, and WordPressdevelopment news.
UNDERSTANDING “SERVER-SIDE” AND “CLIENT-SIDE” IN WORDPRESS Fred Meyer / March 3, 2020 Posted In: Back-End Development, Front-End
Development ,
Server Administration Tags: Browser rendering ,Client-stars , HTML
, HTTP ,
PHP , Server-Side
, Up and Running
Difficulty: Beginner This article explains “server-side vs. client side” in WordPress development. This distinction, and how the server side and client side interact, is at the core of not only WordPress development, but of any real understanding of how the web works. So if you want to know what on a WordPress site is server-side and what OTHER RECENT ARTICLES USING WORDPRESS CUSTOM FIELDS TO ENHANCE A PLUGIN WORDPRESS SHORTCODE TUTORIAL: HOW TO CREATE SHORTCODES, AND WHY THEY’RE SUPER-USEFUL WORKING WITH WORDPRESS USER ROLES AND CAPABILITIES SITEGROUND VS. KINSTA: CHOOSING BETWEEN THE TWO BEST WORDPRESS HOSTS ------------------------- LINKS AND QUICK GUIDESMarch 4, 2020
TINKERWELL FOR WORDPRESS As someone who has been tracking both the WordPress world and the Laravel world for years, I was intrigued by Ross Wintle highlighting something I didn’t really know much about. (If I’m honest, it’s been about a year since I was dipping into Laravel regularly.) Anyway, this Tinkerwell tool looks both interesting and fun. For *anyone* who does PHP development. And that Ross highlights some actual uses for WordPress-specific work meant I just had to share it. Give it a look, and make help Ross a bit by buying it with his link. Or just watch the video and write down on a someday-maybe list that you should buy it. (I’ll admit that’s what I did :p) Visit rosswintle.uk →February 28, 2020
HOW AND WHY TO MAKE A CUSTOMER JOURNEY MAP I’ve loved Torque Mag for a long time as a great source for both technical and editorial content based around WordPress—even if customer satisfaction dataand personal
experience have me feeling more lukewarm about WP Engine itself. This article reminded me why. It’s a nicely accessible introduction to a customer journey map, with instructions for creating a simple map for your own business. Understanding your customer journeys is one manifestation of what seems like the single fundamental edict of marketing—customer empathy—and a topic that’s very relevant to my own needs, both here on WPShout (hi, by the way! let us know how we can help) and elsewhere. Visit torquemag.io →February 27, 2020
QUICK GUIDE: HOW TO INSTALL A NEW WORDPRESS THEME USING A ZIP FILE This text and video Quick Guide covers something simple and important in WordPress: how to install a WordPress theme from a zip file. Installing a WordPress Theme from a Zip File: When and Why Most WordPress sites that have a serious purpose in mind should not be built on a free theme from WordPress's official theme repository. Instead, you'll want to… Keep reading about How to Install a New WordPress Theme Using a ZipFile →
February 20, 2020
DON’T JUST WRITE WORDPRESS CODE One of the first and most powerful lessons I learned while teaching myself to code a decade ago was to READ/LISTEN/WATCH WIDELY. I believe it is one of the most powerful choices you can make in learning to code (or in almost any endeavor). Because broader minds (ones which have been exposed to more things) are often *way* better problem-solvers than narrower ones. Because the solution space they can conceive is just so much bigger. But that’s enough “David’s Life Philosophy” for now. The reason I’m going on about that because it was precisely this same lessons I saw when reading this nice little essay from Justin Tadlock over at the Tavern. I think the specifics of Justin’s story are both useful and interesting too. But it was his close that meant I had to share it with you: > Another benefit of working with other platforms from time to time is > that you learn ideas that you can bring back into the WordPress > ecosystem. For example, it is interesting to see how the Sage > starter theme implements Laravel Blade’s > templating engine. These ideas can help shape WordPress’ future.>
> Some ideas can be pushed into core WordPress. Others can improve > team workflows within agencies.>
> Continuing education benefits the WordPress community as a whole. > Don’t limit that education to WordPress-specific ideas. Learn from > the outside and bring it back. Visit wptavern.com →February 20, 2020
QUICK GUIDE: HOW TO SEE WHICH WORDPRESS TEMPLATE FILE IS IN USE WITH SHOW CURRENT TEMPLATE In this text and video Quick Guide, we teach you how to show the WordPress template file being used on a given webpage on your site, using the Show Current Template or Which Template plugins. Why Show Current Template is Useful WordPress uses its template hierarchy to dictate which PHP template files will control the display of which webpages. Understanding… Keep reading about How to See Which WordPress Template File is In Use with Show Current Template →February 18, 2020
QUICK GUIDE: HOW TO CREATE HERO IMAGES WITH BEAVER BUILDER This is a guide to creating a hero image on a WordPress site using the Beaver Builder plugin. What a Hero Image Is Hero images (and hero sections more broadly) are the large, "full-bleed" sections you see at the top of many website homepages and landing pages. They usually include a call-to-action that directs the user's attention to themost…
Keep reading about How to Create Hero Images with Beaver Builder →February 17, 2020
CANCELLATION OF WORDCAMP ASIA 2020 The first WordCamp Asia, scheduled in Bangkok from February 21 through February 23, has been canceled due to COVID-19 fears. It’s an unfortunate start to what will be an amazing WordCamp Asia tradition, but there’ve been a lot of silver linings, including WordFence, Yoast, GoDaddy, and ServMask each chipping in $10,000 to help with airline and hotel change fees. In general, from my distant vantage point (and drawing mostly on coverage in the always excellent Post Status newsletter), the logistics and decision making around the cancellation seem to speak highly of WordPress as a global community, idiosyncratically organized but quite functional and tight-knit. Can’t wait to see everybody in 2021! Visit 2020.asia.wordcamp.org →February 14, 2020
EVEN ON PHP 7, WORDPRESS IS NOT “MODERN PHP” Our friend Carl Alexander wrote a (possibly) inflammatory but true argument for Delicious Brains this week. It reflects a lot of thoughts I’ve had as I’ve spent the last few years as one of the small minority of people trying to span the roles of “WordPress” and “modern PHP” developer. In short, he’s said all I’ve thought in a fair, even handed, and useful way. While action is hardly guaranteed, helping to reach a public consensus about the state of WordPress PHP is the first step in evolving toward making it a modern PHP project (if that’s ever desired by enough of the right people,of course).
Here’s maybe the most important (to me) of Carl’s many goodpoints:
> Part of the reason for that is WordPress is a legacy application > . The WordPress project > itself is more than 15 years old, but it’s also a fork of another > project called b2/cafelog. This was an open source project that had > already existed for a few years before Matt and Mike > decided to fork it. So > all things considered WordPress is a lot closer to 20 years old.>
> Working with software that old brings unique challenges. Case in > point: Your development practices tilt towards not keeping up with > what others may be doing in the industry. This is especially true > with WordPress. That’s because the PHP ecosystem wasn’t at all > like it is now when the WordPress project started. Visit deliciousbrains.com →February 12, 2020
HOW TO SET A WORDPRESS MENU LINK TO OPEN IN A NEW TAB I’ve got a client with a custom nav menu link pointing to a third-party service. He wanted that custom link to open in a new tab, and I realized I didn’t know how to do it. Fortunately, opening a menu link in a new tab is easy, and it’s available in WordPress core—no plugins or custom code required. Thelinked article
gives a perfect visual guide to it. The solution is interesting for a couple of reasons: * It’s another of many examples where something perfectly easy is hidden thanks to the “Screen Options” interface. * It’s an example where something useful is available through the backend Menu interface, but not the Customizer menu interface. Two last thoughts: hardcoding “open this link in a new tab” is not great for UI/UX generally, since you’re making a decision for the user—proliferate tabs—that she should either be able to make herself (if she knows her browser), or that she may not want made. Also, accessibility guidelines stipulate that links you’re going to set to open in a new tab should include an indication that you are doing so, like the icons Wikipedia uses. So just saying, don’t gocrazy.
Visit docs.presscustomizr.com →February 5, 2020
WE’RE LOOKING FOR TECH-TUTORIAL AUTHORS In 2020, Fred and I are prioritizing featuring writing from people other than ourselves on WPShout. If you’ve got an urge to write clear, useful, and interesting technical tutorials for the WPShout audience, this is the perfect opportunity for you. We’re still locking in all the details, but in short it’d likely be at most an article assignment per month, where you’ll write about 1500 words (ideally with some code snippets ) about your favorite things in WordPress adjacent code. Especially qualified candidates will help us write great tutorials on many different things, but we’re especially looking to get more great content about how to build your own Gutenberg blocks and how to make it into the page-builder of your clients dreams. A few quick details to clarify here: this is *paid* writing work. And we’ll follow up with qualified candidates within a few weeks. We look forward to hearing from you! Visit docs.google.com →January 31, 2020
WORDPRESS 5.4 MAY INCLUDE DEFAULT IMAGE LAZY-LOADING Lazy-loading images is one well-known win for site speed, and at present if you want to implement it in WordPress you have to choose among one of many subtly different plugin options. It now looks like WordPress 5.4, due out in March, may include default lazy-loading for all images. I think bringing lazy loading into WordPress core as a “by-default” behavior for images is a really cool idea. To tell the truth, I couldn’t name the most recent changes to WordPress since 5.0, but default lazy loading seems like a really great and sensible win for site speed. Lots more detail in the linked article. Visit wptavern.com →January 30, 2020
QUICK GUIDE: ADD A MAP TO WORDPRESS WITH WP GOOGLE MAPS There are 1000 reasons you might want to show a map on your WordPress site. Everything from a one-time event that happened at a cool place you want to show off to the (probably more common) case where you want to help your site visitors find the physical, real-world location of your business. For all the reasons and more, you'll… Keep reading about Add a Map to WordPress with WP Google Maps →January 29, 2020
10UP ACTIONS FROM QUICK PLUGIN DEPLOY FROM GITHUB If there’s one problem that developers have with the WordPress.org Plugin (and Theme) directories, it’s most likely to be that the process of deploying the Subversion repositories used by that site is annoying, complicated, and cumbersome. I’ve been looking for a solution for a while, and this (pre-Christmas ) post from Helen Hou-Sandi has me really excited for 10up and Github’s new “Actions” feature. What they’ve released (best I can tell) is a simple quick way that I can deploy a update to a WordPress plugin right from a Github repository. And without maintaining my own set of small shell scripts which is supposed to make it easier to do. I have to admit it’ll likely be a few more weeks before I try these out, but I’m really hopeful that they’ll be the WordPress.org deployment story of mydreams.
Visit 10up.com →
January 29, 2020
UPDATE THE ELEMENTOR PLUGIN ASAP: SECURITY VULNERABILITY FOUND They found a security vulnerability in the Elementor plugin. It’s patched in the newest version of the plugin, so if you use Elementor, please update to the latest version as soon as you can. (And if you happen to be nervous about updating stuff, this week’s article is perfectly timed.) This sort of security issue could probably happen to any plugin—and, anecdotally, it seems to be happening more and more often in the WordPress ecosystem—but if you’d like to be persuaded to switch to Beaver Builder , check out ourcomparison of the
two plugins.
Visit searchenginejournal.com →January 23, 2020
QUICK GUIDE: HOW TO CREATE A CONTACT FORM WITH GRAVITY FORMS Gravity Forms is one of WordPress's most popular form plugins, and our first choice to create a contact form. Below is a step-by-step guide to creating a contact form with Gravity Forms. How to Use Gravity Forms, Step-By-Step Purchase and download Gravity Forms. Go to "Plugins" > "Add New". Then, click "Upload Plugin" at the top of thescreen. Click…
Keep reading about How to Create a Contact Form with Gravity Forms →January 22, 2020
CORY MILLER JOINS POST STATUS I’m really excited to know that Cory Miller — you may know from a year of running a company called iThemes — is joining Brian Krogsgard at Post Status. While you might not know, Brian is one of the quiet pillars of the WordPress community. While he hasn’t always had everyone’s ear, he’s always had the attention of some of the most important people in the WordPress community. While they aren’t really announcing new plans (but they had a great conversation which is the bottom of that post), they’re clearly both excited to work together and work in the WordPress community. And the energy of two selfless, trustworthy people combining for the first time is truly very very exciting. To many more, Brian and Cory! Visit poststatus.com →January 20, 2020
A COMPLETE GUIDE TO FLEXBOX If you’re still hesitant to learn CSS’s Flexbox module, today’s the day. This Flexbox guide from CSS-Tricks is so beautifully clear and so visual that, in my experience, Flexbox almost learned itself—you just need to point your open eyes toward the screen. What is Flexbox good for? I use it for all kinds of “multi-column” needs where I used to have to use float, inline-block, or other side-effect-ful solutions. It’s 2020, and Flexbox is now well-supported by all browsers that aren’t The Villain, so give it 20 minutes and see what you pick up. Visit css-tricks.com →January 16, 2020
QUICK GUIDE: REUSABLE BLOCKS IN WORDPRESS: HOW-TO There was (and still is) a lot of discussion of WordPress's latest "Block" or "Gutenberg" editor. It's still not the case that all WordPress sites have embraced the future it represents. (As I write this on WPShout in Jan 2020, I'm still using the "Classic" "Visual" or "TinyMCE" WordPress editor.) But one of the best features of the newWordPress…
Keep reading about Reusable Blocks in WordPress: How-to →January 15, 2020
WORDPRESS-ADJACENT CONFERENCES FOR 2020 I really appreciated this list from Callie West of conferences for 2020 that may be of interest to WordPress developers. While I trust that her list isn’t exhaustive, it does cover all the big conferences that were on my mind for the year, and a few I’d never heard of. Which means her list is doing its job absolutely perfectly. In summary you should check out this list if you’re interested in seeing the major conferences in these buckets:* WordCamps
* JavaScript conferences * Laravel and PHP conferences* CSS confs
* UX, development in general, and more If any of those interested you, please give the article some love. She also finishes with some advice for those of you who might have to convince a boss to help you pay for a conference trip Visit deliciousbrains.com →January 13, 2020
SEARCH THROUGH A WORDPRESS SITE’S FILES WITH THE STRING LOCATORPLUGIN
Among the most difficult challenges in WordPress development is finding out where a piece of code actually lives. Up to two themes and infinite plugins could be hooking into any part of WordPress and changing things, and if you want to track down a specific change it’s often the most time-consuming part of an otherwise easy job. This week, I found out about a cool plugin that lets you do a string search of anything on your WordPress filesystem—one theme, one plugin, all themes, all plugins, the entirety of wp-content, and more. I tried it out and it works as advertised. It’s the WordPress filesystem equivalent to the visibility a plugin like Better SearchReplace helps
provide into the WordPress database. I wouldn’t rely on either plugin as infallible (I’m not sure if Better Search Replace can find serialized data, for example), but they’re a much better place to start than poking aimlessly around themes and plugins and trying to read a previous developer’s mind. Visit wordpress.org → More Links to Cool StuffRESOURCES
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