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klem_johansen posted:Any recommendations for catalog/e-commerce plug-ins for WordPress? I'm looking into Magneto Go as well as cheaper options like Shopper Press, & Shopp. Any thoughts? As for payment gateways, have you have good or bad experiences with any of them? I've used Authorize.net, and they've been OK. WooCommerce is pretty popular. Authorize.net or Stripe (not technically a gateway) have been my goto choices.
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# ? Apr 16, 2013 02:13 |
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# ? May 14, 2024 21:59 |
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I have a client who's having some weird issues with a specific post (when you'd try to edit it, it would throwing errors when trying to load the revisions). In the course of troubleshooting the problem, I found that every single image in all of his posts are saved in the database as base64. I checked a couple of other WP sites I maintain and did not see the same thing. Anyone know if this is normal and/or caused by a plugin? Whenever I see base64 I get paranoid and automatically assume something's been hacked, however I tested all the images out – they're the correct images... just encoded for some weird reason. e: Hmmm actually it looks like only some of his images are in base64... images which he created. I wonder if he's copying and pasting them from some other program that's sticking them in his clipboard as base64? kedo fucked around with this message at 15:42 on Apr 18, 2013 |
# ? Apr 18, 2013 15:38 |
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kedo posted:e: Hmmm actually it looks like only some of his images are in base64... images which he created. I wonder if he's copying and pasting them from some other program that's sticking them in his clipboard as base64? Inline images in the post? I've seen this happen (although not specifically on Wordpress) when you drag the image or copy/paste into the TinyMCE editor.
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# ? Apr 18, 2013 16:32 |
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-JS- posted:Inline images in the post? I've seen this happen (although not specifically on Wordpress) when you drag the image or copy/paste into the TinyMCE editor. Yeah, after discussing it with the client it sounds like that's it, although I think it might be the browser (Firefox) rather than TinyMCE? Either way it's retarded and I need to figure out a way to disable it. This client's database is about a week old and is already up to 300MB since WP is basically duplicating every image he's inserted in the database every time it saves a revision. Oh god how will I sanitize and export this...
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# ? Apr 18, 2013 16:39 |
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Iirc there is a plugin that will let you delete images not associated with a post, maybe that will help shrink the size
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# ? Apr 18, 2013 17:29 |
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kedo, can you post what plugins you are using?
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# ? Apr 18, 2013 17:39 |
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I'm not using that many and out of all of 'em I think TinyMCE is probably the most obvious culprit. Advanced Custom Fields Contact Form 7 Formstack plugin Jetpack MailChimp TinyMCE Advanced However a bunch of forums / blog posts I've read all state that Firefox automatically converts images dropped in a textarea into base64, and I know for a fact the client is both using Firefox and dropping images into textareas, but I haven't found anything from Mozilla confirming it. However I sort of have a hard time believing it because it's so idiotic. Also dragging and dropping an image into a textarea in Chrome just opens the image in the window... it doesn't put the image in the textarea, which leads me to believe it's probably browser related.
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# ? Apr 18, 2013 19:02 |
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I want to set up a wordpress site where people can register as users and then access a private page which has a contact form. Once they fill in the contact form, I can add or subtract points from a secret field associated with that particular user - we'll call the field 'points'. So, person registers as user Bob. Bob logins and accesses a private page with the contact form. Bob fills the form out and submits it. I review the submission and modify Bob's points by 10 (or whatever). Bob can also access a private page with download links to various PDFs. --- What's the best way to do this in Wordpress?
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# ? Apr 20, 2013 06:58 |
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kedo posted:I'm not using that many and out of all of 'em I think TinyMCE is probably the most obvious culprit. Try disabling the TinyMCE Advanced plugin. I got rid of that a long time ago on all my sites. Not sure why I even installed it in the first place. clockworkjoe posted:I want to set up a wordpress site where people can register as users and then access a private page which has a contact form. Once they fill in the contact form, I can add or subtract points from a secret field associated with that particular user - we'll call the field 'points'. Probably a combination of Gravity Forms, and Wishlist, which I use both: http://member.wishlistproducts.com/ http://www.gravityforms.com/ I use gravity forms for all my login/signup stuff, then make restricted member only pages with Wishlist. Works pretty well. Downside is that you have to shell out for the license for both, but in my experience it is well worth it since hobbling together a free solution usually takes about my going rate in
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# ? Apr 20, 2013 20:55 |
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Gyshall posted:Try disabling the TinyMCE Advanced plugin. I got rid of that a long time ago on all my sites. Not sure why I even installed it in the first place. Thanks for the info! Would this plugin handle the custom field pretty well or is there a better plugin? http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/custom-metadata/
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# ? Apr 20, 2013 21:48 |
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What's the best way to go about mobile themes? I made a weird looking theme and of course it looks like poo poo on phones. Is there a way to detect if someone's on a phone and load a whole different theme? Or would it be easier in the long run to just have one theme and modify it so it looks good on both?
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# ? Apr 30, 2013 16:39 |
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There are a couple of plugins that will let you deliver a different theme to mobile devices, but in my experience they can be difficult to use since you can't (for example) set up a different widget configuration for the mobile theme, at least with the plugin I tried. I also had to edit the plugin code to make it stop treating desktop Opera as a mobile browser and some other problems, but there may be better plugins available now. If you don't mind having a generic mobile site, Jetpack can be configured to detect mobile browsers and give them a mobile friendly theme. You can't customize it, though, at least not last time I checked. [edit] In other words, it might be easier to try to create a responsive theme that looks okay on multiple browsers. It's not that hard to do with CSS using @media queries, although it does mean that your mobile version will still be loading most of the same assets (like big images) that the desktop site will. Heresiarch fucked around with this message at 17:06 on Apr 30, 2013 |
# ? Apr 30, 2013 17:00 |
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Thanks. I think I will bite the bullet and try using the @media thing. I've only ever seen it working in Twitter Bootstrap, so I think I'll have to use that as a basis and just keep copying stuff until it works. Big images aren't a problem, the main challenge is going to be switching from a two-column desktop layout to a one-column phone layout.
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# ? Apr 30, 2013 17:35 |
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fuf posted:Thanks. I think I will bite the bullet and try using the @media thing. I've only ever seen it working in Twitter Bootstrap, so I think I'll have to use that as a basis and just keep copying stuff until it works. The term you want to be Googling is "responsive design".
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# ? Apr 30, 2013 21:37 |
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Yeah, fuf, try using a responsive, mobile friendly theme. I usually start with the Skeleton framework for the majority of my sites. http://themes.simplethemes.com/skeleton/ Also have had good luck with "Responsive" - http://wordpress.org/extend/themes/responsive Delivering up mobile sites is so 2012, man.
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# ? May 1, 2013 14:24 |
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Gyshall posted:Yeah, fuf, try using a responsive, mobile friendly theme. I usually start with the Skeleton framework for the majority of my sites.
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# ? May 1, 2013 15:04 |
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Anyone have a link to a step by step guide on how to move an entire wordpress site (theme, posts, images, etc.) over to new hosting and url?
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# ? May 2, 2013 15:23 |
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1. Copy all the files. 2. Dump the database. 3. Use the mysql bundled program "replace" to find and replace the old URL with the new URL on your SQL file. 4. Upload your files and import the database. Nothing else to worry about, typically.
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# ? May 2, 2013 15:27 |
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If you are comfortable with the command line, sed is a powerful search and replace tool, useful for replacing all of the old urls with the new one. code:
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# ? May 2, 2013 17:19 |
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I have found the instructions in the Wordpress Codex to be extremely helpful for a newbie.
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# ? May 2, 2013 18:17 |
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Also tell Google you changed your domain name so your rankings don't get slammed too hard - http://support.google.com/webmasters/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=83106
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# ? May 2, 2013 20:35 |
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I changed my host recently and now I'm getting 500 errors on the main site and occasional 404 while in the admin. Where should I start looking? I feel it may be a database issue but I'm not sure.
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# ? May 4, 2013 02:15 |
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Open up your browser inspector and watch the assets as they load, there might be some clues there. Also check your error logs. Double check your file permissions. And also make sure that your rewrite rules are not breakings things. Actually I would check your htaccess first. Did your domain name change? What is different about this host compared to your previous host? Doing a quick comparison of the two could shed light on where to start troubleshooting.
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# ? May 4, 2013 04:50 |
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roybot9000 posted:Open up your browser inspector and watch the assets as they load, there might be some clues there. Also check your error logs. Double check your file permissions. And also make sure that your rewrite rules are not breakings things. Actually I would check your htaccess first. Domain hasn't changed, both are plain old cpanel shared hosts. Ill check the inspector but the site seems to just be timing out. htaccess looks ok from what I can tell. Ill look at the error logs and permissions however.
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# ? May 4, 2013 05:13 |
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rt4 posted:1. Copy all the files. This sounds more advanced than I'm comfortable with. Would anyone be willing to do this for me for $25? It doesn't sound like it would take a long time, I just don't want to screw everything up.
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# ? May 6, 2013 13:32 |
Alfalfa posted:This sounds more advanced than I'm comfortable with. As long as you make a backup of the files and the database beforehand (you can use those very backup files to do the migration too), nothing can really go wrong. You should back the files and database up even if you hire someone to do it for you.
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# ? May 6, 2013 13:40 |
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I'm using the Wordpress Events Manager, which is a very popular events manager plugin. I've created a widget to go with this that queries events and displays them in a list, pulling some other details from other plugins as well. I've got a query going that gets the last few events, but I only want to display events that are tagged as featured. Putting "tag => featured" in the array returns no results, even though I'm positive that one of the events is tagged as featured. This seems to be because the events manager's tags are somehow different than usual Wordpress tags. I know this because using get_the_tags returns nothing, even though I've got an event tagged "featured". Since this is the one hurdle left with the events slideshow I'm trying to create, it's driving me nuts. Here's my code: code:
I feel weird asking a question that has to do with a plugin and not Wordpress itself, but I figured it might be a popular enough plugin and/or getting tags from custom post types might be more common of a thing than I know.
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# ? May 6, 2013 18:12 |
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^^^ Based on what I'm reading, it may work to change 'post_type' => 'event' in the 'tax_query' array item to 'taxonomy' => 'event-tag' and remove the 'tag' => 'featured'
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# ? May 6, 2013 21:40 |
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Winter is Cuming posted:^^^ The tag => featured was commented out, but I've removed that anyway. Changing it to taxonomy => event tag doesn't work, it still displays no events. This is driving me nuts. The only way this slideshow thing is going to work is if I find SOME way to differentiate some events as "featured" and make the query only pull things tagged "featured". The Events Mananger uses its own categories and tags, so I can't filter it using either of those. Edit: I did it by creating a new user named "Featured Event Manager" and the featured events will all need to have their author set to that user. It's sloppy, but the event author isn't displayed anywhere on the site, so it shouldn't cause any problems. It is sloppy though, so I'd like to figure out how to do it the correct way. LifeLynx fucked around with this message at 22:18 on May 6, 2013 |
# ? May 6, 2013 22:03 |
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I am in the middle of hell right now transferring a site designed in Twitter Bootstrap to WordPress. Overall it doesn't seem to bad aside from still waiting on content from the client. I am playing dangerous though as I need to include the Bootstrap JS and files. I looked around for plugins but the authors don't seem to keep things up to date. Is my original method of just putting the Twitter BS files in the folders going to be okay?
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# ? May 8, 2013 15:34 |
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Vintersorg posted:I am in the middle of hell right now transferring a site designed in Twitter Bootstrap to WordPress. Overall it doesn't seem to bad aside from still waiting on content from the client. I am playing dangerous though as I need to include the Bootstrap JS and files. I looked around for plugins but the authors don't seem to keep things up to date. The right way to do this would be to integrate Bootstrap into the theme itself, using plugins isn't what you want to do because they break / clients uninstall them randomly, etc.
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# ? May 8, 2013 16:05 |
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http://www.rootstheme.com/ Or http://320press.com/wpbs/ ,which is boostrap built on top of http://themble.com/bones/. Or http://bootstrapwp.rachelbaker.me/ mcsuede fucked around with this message at 19:52 on May 9, 2013 |
# ? May 9, 2013 19:50 |
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I run http://thesavvybackpacker.com and I need a small change. The theme I'm using uses a sidebar that is 270px but I'd like it to be 300px wide since that is the standard size for most sidebars/ads. My main concern is that my theme is responsive so I'd like the theme to still look correct when it is viewed with a smaller device (I was reading on the theme's support forum and someone else tried this and things got a little wonky). The theme author says "If you have changed the width of the sidebar and the content area, you would need to adjust their widths for the responsive layout as well. You can do that by adjusting the widths in the css media queries, which you will find at the end of the style.css file. Just open the style.css file and change the widths of the sidebars and the content are there in the media queries of each device." but I had someone else look at the modification and they said that the theme uses javascript to make the css changes on the fly.... I don't know anything about this stuff so hopefully one of you fine folk do. This is the theme I'm using... http://themeforest.net/item/metro-m...s-theme/3834138 I've posted this job on SA-Mart if anyone is interested: http://forums.somethingawful.com/showthread.php?threadid=3548946
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# ? May 12, 2013 18:08 |
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I am about to take on a project that involves building a membership based website. Basically get access to training videos after you signup, maybe with a free membership level then a pay level. I have been reading about all the membership plugins and the pros and cons from other review websites, but I have more of a question of architecture and keeping it clean. Does anyone have experience with having maybe two instances of Wordpress running? one at https://www.yourdomain.com and then another at members.yourdomain.com and having a more customized membership experience when this is setup? versus just having one Wordpress instance, and trying to manage all the membership rights across the website. One big concern with 2 is obviously having to possibly manage certain pieces of content twice. With two I think it is easier for my non technical client to do updates that don't involve membership specific tag blocks. If anyone knows of any articles or anything on this that would be cool. da keebsta knicca fucked around with this message at 09:17 on May 14, 2013 |
# ? May 14, 2013 09:15 |
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Running a Wordpress multisite will let you manage users, posts, and code across multiple sites with their own domains, I think http://codex.wordpress.org/Create_A_Network
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# ? May 14, 2013 13:40 |
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Does WP provide a function to deactivate a plugin by name? I ask because one of the people I work with has a local setup that for some reason sends tons of email via WP Better Security until it gets deactivated. What I'd like to do is to add something in functions.php that'll detect if we're running on "localhost" and then deactivate that plugin.
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# ? May 14, 2013 21:19 |
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rt4 posted:Does WP provide a function to deactivate a plugin by name? I pulled up this quick: http://wpseek.com/deactivate_plugins/ Looks like the function is deactivate_plugins, found in plugin.php in wp-includes.
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# ? May 14, 2013 21:36 |
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da keebsta knicca posted:I am about to take on a project that involves building a membership based website. Basically get access to training videos after you signup, maybe with a free membership level then a pay level. I have been reading about all the membership plugins and the pros and cons from other review websites, but I have more of a question of architecture and keeping it clean. I'm afraid I can't answer your direct question but I can say I use S2Member a lot with amateur content managers and it's really not hard. You can select from a dropdown to restrict a post or page to a certain membership level, and there are very easy to understand shortcode conditionals for restricting content within a given page.
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# ? May 15, 2013 02:57 |
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Thanks. I am used to running adult websites years and years ago and it was more like sales front end / membership behind a wall. So basically two separate websites. With wordpress setups it seems like it is all integrated in one site. I would kind of want totally separate main menus, completely different landing pages and such. IE once you are logged in it is a whole new world for the most part. I will ask for some suggestions on some of the forums for the different membership solutions maybe.
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# ? May 15, 2013 08:01 |
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# ? May 14, 2024 21:59 |
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Anyone know a better guide than the one in the codex for optimizing Wordpress? We're stretching up to 100,000k monthly views on a site with several high-powered plugins and it's pushing our VPS way too hard. I'm doing tons of stuff on the server side that is helping but I think I need more pointers on optimizing the WP and plugin code itself somehow. I use WP Super Cache, which is great, but we have a ton of logged in users who I can't serve cached pages to due to cookies and whatnot.
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# ? May 15, 2013 15:06 |