Rating: 5 stars
The plugin does work great, but it also added expired before all the menu items..
how can I fix this????
Rating: 5 stars
I have been scratching my mind to find the perfect solution for my client until I stumbled upon this simple plugin that does exactly as mentioned in the documentation. Very simple but powerful. Well done guys !
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As for others, even in my case has caused this plugin to remove content and display an “Expired” message on random pages and posts regardless of expiration date set to “Never” (untouched). Even with v1.5, where (according to the changelog) this has already been fixed (theoretically).
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After using the latest version of this plugin, any expired post has all the other links on that page prefaced with “Expired: “
It’s too bad, as this plugin is perfect in all other ways.
I will have to continue my search for another post expiration plugin, unless the author can help me?
Thanks!
Rating: 4 stars
As previously commented, this plugins do its job but also deactivate many posts where expiration date hasn’t be defined. Maybe you may need to install it on a fresh project, before adding content, if you want to use this feature and make it works as expected.
EDIT : I revised my review as this issue is now fixed, see comments below
Nevertheless, Content Expire Scheduler doesn’t respond exactly to the planning feature I looking for, as it only add a prefix to expired posts and replace “the_content()” by a custom notification.
That’s unfortunate because imo it uses the best way to integrate such a system to WordPress, adding expiration fields within the post publish/schedule box.
]]>Rating: 5 stars
cool!
]]>Rating: 1 star
This plugin seems to work as advertised to display an “Expired” message according to the schedule set.
However, this plugin will also remove content and display an “Expired” message on random pages and posts with the Expiration date set to “Never”. Use at your own risk.
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