Rating: 5 stars
++
]]>Rating: 5 stars
Thanks….<a href=”https://www.mesinhitunguangtissor.com/blog/harga-mesin-kasir-murah
“>Harga Mesin Kasir Murah
Rating: 5 stars
I really like the idea of this plugin but my site suffered significant “bloat” because of the variety of image sizes that the plugin made of each upload. Now, I get error warnings when using Duplicator because of the huge image folder. I also disabled the plugin and will go through and try to eliminate the code issues and the many, many sizes of each image.
]]>Rating: 2 stars
I like the idea of this and I believe this plugin would be a benefit for those who wish to place a LOT of large dimension images on their website.
For my purposes I will remove the plugin and will have to go through code to remove unnecessary and unwanted code.
When I need it, it will be much easier to manually put the code in and utilise the varying sizes WordPress outputs when uploading images.
Browser support for the srcset attribute is still limited – initially I thought it still a great idea to benefit those who use browsers that support srcset.
But
I regularly place small images/thumbnails that link to lightbox versions. The plugin was placing code onto the 150×150 thumbnails – which is pointless and adds code clutter.
I deactivated the plugin, deciding only to turn it on for inserting large images. Recently I discovered, on opening up the read more divs on my website that all the images within were now displaying at 100% width. This totally broke the layout of the pages and obviously images of 200px wide now looked horrible when displaying many times bigger than actual resolution. I activated the plugin and the images displayed correctly again – but now I am back with unnecessary code being added to thumbnails. The reason I didn’t notice this earlier was all other images inserted, while plugin was activated, beyond the expanding divs were in max-width containers. I believe a recent WordPress or plugin update created this display issue.
If there were a check box added within the Add Media section that would allow the code only to be placed when checked would make me be happy to have the plugin installed and activated.
]]>Rating: 4 stars
I did not like having all the images sizes added to the code in my post. When I went to the post I was getting code errors for images which are not in the post (because they were off sizes from the actual image). Now, after uninstalling the plugin I still have all that extra code in every post. I’m going to have a lot of clean up from this plugin. Of course, I’m not happy with that.
I think your idea for this plugin is right on the mark. But, the practical side of making it work needs change. Adding extra code to the post is not something I want to do.
I’m leaving this as a review so others will know what to expect and (though it may not seem like it) to encourage the developers. I’m not rating the plugin low because it does what it says it will do.
]]>Rating: 5 stars
seriously Thank you for developing this
]]>Rating: 5 stars
Thanks for your plug in, it boostes my site.
Gmetrix > before: 88%, after: 94% !!!
YSlow Score > same 79%
PageSpeed Insights before / after: 89/90%
PageSpeed Insights mobile > before : 61%, after: 74% !!!
Pingdom > before / after: 84/85%
I use :
function custom_theme_setup() {
add_theme_support( ‘advanced-image-compression’ );
}
add_action( ‘after_setup_theme’, ‘custom_theme_setup’ );
I don’t see really the difference without and with these few lines. I win or lose 1% but i thinks it’s not depending about your lines but about test sites.
Thanks,
Best regards,
Hélène
Rating: 4 stars
Fantastic. Works straight out the box, I didn’t even have to go back and update any old code or old posts. However, it doesn’t play well with JetPack Photon, or JetPack Image Widgets.
]]>Rating: 5 stars
Why doesn’t WP do stuff like this natively? Seems like a nobrainer.
]]>Rating: 5 stars
Great plugin, works like a charm. I had a problem with an outdated plugin conflicting with it, but once I turned that one off it’s been working like a champ.
]]>Rating: 5 stars
srcset ftw!
since 2.3 also supporting the galleries, just what i wanted ??
]]>Rating: 5 stars
Must have in any WordPress website installation and specifically in photo-blogs and photo-centric websites. Rework your content and all the images and the content will fork for you.
]]>Rating: 5 stars
This plugin made my images responsive; picture my delight.
]]>Rating: 5 stars
Definitely a must-have plugin. Works like a char out of the box.
Thanks for that state of the art contribution.
Rating: 4 stars
I am glad i found this time saving plugin. Upon you add caption the image is going out of the box. I hope they will fix it soon. (tried this on a clean wp installation)
]]>Rating: 4 stars
If this is the first plugin you install on your setup (or at least, one of the first), and you are sure that all of your needed image sizes are set up in your functions.php, then this plugin is fantastic, nothing less.
If not, yeah, my experience is that it only works with features images and thumbnails (anything but post images).
The only thing this plugin needs, is some way to fetch old images in our posts, and update these.
]]>Rating: 5 stars
Easy to implement, works great with ACF custom images too without having to add anything to the functions file.
]]>Rating: 5 stars
The plugin does exactly what it is supposed to do. So I’m happy!
]]>Rating: 5 stars
The plugin works fine. To be compatible with future versions of wp, makes it perfect.
]]>Rating: 5 stars
I WANT THIS TO WORK AS A DEFAULT PART OF CORE but I don’t know on what TIMELINE, and to what EXTENT, the core developers will proceed with it. The reason I think those two things matter is that are two other plugins currently available https://www.ads-software.com/plugins/picturefillwp/ and https://github.com/kylereicks/picturefill.js.wp/tree/master; and they each use a different version of Picturefill. Also, WordPress.com is working on improving the Photon component of JetPack by implementing their own particular version of Picturefill here: https://github.com/Automattic/jetpack/pull/1339.
I don’t know if conflicts will arise between WordPress.com and www.ads-software.com out of their separate implementations of Picturefill, but I would like to know if NOW is a safe time to start using this plugin on a self-hosted site.