We all know that Page Builders are clunky and bloated and make too much code on the page which, in turn, destroys SEO… but if Gutenberg was ONLY a plugin, I think everyone would have given it better reviews and ENJOYED it.
With it being part of WP core, it ruins the whole WP plugin versus theme rule that WP itself has required theme builders to go by. King of a foot-in-mouth type of move where they are not practicing what they preach.
Nice try, but 1 star from me for breaking the rules (Doing it Wrong) and for putting into core.
]]>The feeling of writing a post on Facebook :/
Page builders all do better than that even in their free version
]]>And who decided that it was a good idea to also make the system tray unavailable until clicking at the top of the window to bring it back?
Last I checked, WordPress was a CMS… NOT an operating system. Whatever pinwheel hat coders came up with this FLAGRANT distortion of normal windows functions should be escorted from the building by security, never to return and some adult should restore WP to it’s appropriate functions.
Short of that, PUT A BIG FN BUTTON ON THE MENU THAT SAYS CLICK HERE TO END THIS JUST PLAIN STUPID WALK INTO THE WEEDS!
Thanks for your prompt attention to this matter.
I’m colorblind and making a website for a client. The person who has the most interest in choosing colors is not someone who will be given any access to the admin view. They need to be able to see the colors applied to the site so they can see why some work (and some really don’t!). Furthermore, they want to do so on the fly and not via edits on my part (on the phone, or iteratively via email).
I need to give them a way for a reader to edit the color scheme, preferably via a color chooser, or just pasting in hex codes. This is not going to be on the final live site but is on the user end, not admin area.
I’ve found nothing in searching for something along these lines so I would appreciate any help, be it code snippets or generalized outlines of how to approach it, or even just some thoughts on how to do so.
Thank you!
]]>I used to be able to skim the list and see what was released within the last day or two. Now I can’t without going somewhere else, and the results I get from that search are a lot different than was the case before.
Likewise, I do NOT find the (mostly irrelevant) images helpful at all. They just break up the page so it’s hard to read the text. I liked the list display a LOT better.
Unfortunately, I don’t do serious coding. (That’s why I use WordPress–duh.) But somebody out there can probably overwrite this ill-conceived notion and restore a more pleasant and logical interface for the plug-ins listing.
I would definitely throw in a few dollars for this one.
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