Hi!
Are “last login” and “active user” the same?
I like to track active users in my blog, and to do so, I’m using “Last 30 days logins” User Toolkit filter. I fear, though, that this may not be the metric I need, since someone could be logged in for a long time without logging out, therefore missing from “Last 30 days logins”.
In case my thinking is correctly, would be feasible a different filter for “last 30 days active users” — or “monthly active users” (MAU)?
]]>Hi there,
Hopefully you can help. We are using this in place of the standard User Switching plugin based on the great additional functions it adds…
However, the filters added to the User list are interfering with Admin Columns Pro and causing all filters to fail. Is there a way / a snippet we can use to disable the user list filters in order to keep using your plugin?
Thanks a lot!
Mike
]]>This bug (?) is present since ever, but since it’s just cosmetics, I’ve never managed to report it — until now.
It looks like this:
I took a look at the CSS code, and it seems this is caused by a conflict/same name class (.switch
) from Subscribe to Comments Reloaded plugin. To be more specific, it’s a margin-top: 7px
in stcr-admin-style.css
file.
Not a super urgent or important bug, but maybe something to fix in the next release? I hope this helps in some way.
]]>I’m having trouble with the switch users function. When I switch to a different user (user 1) it works fine, then I use the switch back to admin link in the lower left and it takes me back to admin as it should. The problem is that if I try to switch to another user (user 2) it takes me to the front end but it is still logged in as user 1. It seems like the problem is that when I use the return to admin link it doesn’t log out of the user 1 account.
]]>Hi Deryck,
when I switch to a user I always get redirected to page_id=4084 ?
This page does not exist and I always get an 404 message…
Thanks for the plugin!
Matthias
Is it possible to have a filter for monthly active users (MAUs) in User Toolkit? As in, a filter that returns all users that logged in at least once in the last 30 days?
This is a standard industry metric, and an easy and useful way to check the community/user base health.
]]>Hi! Some users were deactivated by this plugin and I can’t tell them why. What is the criteria?
More concerning, in my staging blog it deactivated my admin user. I got intrigued (and worried), since it’s impossible to deactivate an admin/first user from inside dashboard.
]]>Hi!
I noticed that User Toolkit’s CSS is being loaded on front-end with no reason. (AFAIK, this plugins runs only on back-end/dashboard.)
The file being loaded is:
https://manualdousuario.net/wp-content/plugins/user-toolkit/assets/dist/app.css
Hi! Deryck!
Since your plugin’s name is “Toolkit”, I felt like I could suggest a new tool for it ??
This feature would leverage the active/inactive control to create a kind of user approval flow: new registrations would be inactive by default, and only active after a review/approval from an admin.
There are plugins out there solving this use case, but I found them cumbersome and really expensive for such an (apparently?) simple feature.
In case of User Toolkit, the only changing is make inactive as default for new users. WordPress default email notifications are fine for letting admins and new users be aware of what’s happening.
]]>I click on Last login header and, although it scrambles the users list depending on the direction (ascending or descending), it doesn’t look like it’s ordering correctly. In both ways logins with “Never” are always on top, even though there are logins that logged in since the plugin was installed.
]]>Have anyone noticed that changelog‘s order is inverted? Newer versions appear on the bottom instead of the top.
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