• Help finding a theme, or where in the themes to activate this feature

    I have searched high and low. All I find is clunky css code. where I also get warnings about updates to the code will/may break with updated to the themes. Or other clunky plug-ins that don’t seem to work because they don’t have access to sidebar stuff.

    It seems that such a basic thing as expanding, collapsing, flying, dropdown, or accordion menus would be more of a basic part in themes. So basic that most seem to do it in the top menu, but none in any other menu position. That means that the themes should already be have the code. Or is it just Hidden?

    I have looked in 10 different themes. Listed below.

    I have finally found it in one theme ‘Twenty fourteen” but it goes by some weird name, and I think I would rather use almost any of the other themes.

    In 2014, its called “Secondary menu in left sidebar” yea, real strait forward.

    Searching articles, they called the feature in 2014 a flyout menu. Searching for that did not help in the search for another theme with the setting.

    Other themes I’ve looked at to no avail:

    twenty nineteen
    twenty sixteen
    twenty seventeen
    shopical
    raindrops
    Generatepress
    Elixar
    Divoge
    Business form

    And, like I say, I’ve tried searching in these forums, but alas, just links to clunky jerry rig CSS solutions.

    You can see the flyout menu in action with the twenty fourteen theme on my site at kc.amazinghands.us

    • This topic was modified 4 years, 10 months ago by pmheart66.
    • This topic was modified 4 years, 10 months ago by Jan Dembowski. Reason: Moved to Fixing WordPress, this is not an Everything else WordPress topic
Viewing 5 replies - 1 through 5 (of 5 total)
  • It seems that such a basic thing as expanding, collapsing, flying, dropdown, or accordion menus would be more of a basic part in themes.

    Only to those that don’t consider accessibility. It is really difficult to write a menu system that is accessible.

    I have finally found it in one theme ‘Twenty fourteen”

    You can copy the CSS for that into a theme that you like better. But that theme’s main navigation is on the side, not the top, which makes it unusual.

    just links to clunky jerry rig CSS solutions

    That’s likely all you will find, anywhere. It is a CSS problem, so you get a CSS solution. Using Javascript for menus makes them slow and bulkier, although it can help accessibility if done right.

    You can merge pieces from different themes, if you don’t find what you want.

    Hi I’m Raindrops author

    I am making a theme called emulsion

    example preview
    https://www.tenman.info/wp3/emulsion/en/2019/12/27/accsessibility-ui-2/

    Not yet hosted .org. now final review.

    https://themes.trac.www.ads-software.com/ticket/72695

    download

    https://github.com/tenman/emulsion

    I want to hear your opinion

    Thank you.

    • This reply was modified 4 years, 10 months ago by nobita.
    Thread Starter pmheart66

    (@pmheart66)

    @joyously Accessible? I guess I don’t know what you mean. But since there is all this “css” out there, that I can add but no longer update the themes, its not quite so “difficult” if they just put that in there.

    @nobita as for your emulsion theme, that looks very promising. That includes both the tabbed menu, as well as the Caret expandable menu in the navigation widget. Nice! Thank you, I will check it out. Hopefully, they get it added to the .org site soon.

    Thread Starter pmheart66

    (@pmheart66)

    p.s. @joyously twenty fourteen’s main menu is actually up top. They must have added it to the side as an afterthought. I mean they just tucked it in as a “secondary menu” That unless you hunt, deeply search, or randomly click, you are unlikely to find it.

    Accessible means that the site can be used easily by everyone, including people with visual, mental, or physical impairments. Having a screen reader read the menu is important for blind users. Keyboard navigation is great for lots of people (even just a broken thumb). etc.
    Navigation widgets should be accessible also. (not just for sighted users with a mouse)

    There is CSS to use. You either put it in your Customizer > Additional CSS to override the theme CSS, or you make a child theme and put it in there, so the parent theme can be updated without affecting your changes.

Viewing 5 replies - 1 through 5 (of 5 total)
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