• Resolved Generosus

    (@generosus)


    Good Day,

    We are using the Avada theme. We noticed that Avada (or The Events Calendar) injects thousands (yes, thousands) of “.tribe” CSS rules inside our non-calendar pages. Click here for details.

    Can you guys provide a method or code snippet (i.e., filter) that will help us remove (dequeue) those pesky “.tribe” CSS rules from non-calendar pages?

    So you know, we have dequeued The Events Calendar assets on non-calendar pages using Perfmatters, but the issue still persists. This tells us that those CSS rules may be hardcoded (inlined) in Avada’s (or your plugin’s) stylesheets.

    Help appreciated!

    Thank you.

    ———————

    Note: We found this potential solution, but it did not work. So … your help is still appreciated. ??

Viewing 4 replies - 1 through 4 (of 4 total)
  • Plugin Support Darian

    (@d0153)

    Hi @generosus

    Thanks for reaching out. Let me help you with this one.

    To assist you in a more effective way, would you mind sharing the URL of the webpage where you are encountering the issue? Additionally, it would be really helpful if you could provide us with any additional information such as screenshots or screen recordings to help us better understand the problem. (The screenshot URL you provided from the Themeforest thread is not working on my end)

    Looking forward to your reply.

    Hi @generosus,

    While we can’t provide support for specific third-party themes like Avada, there are a couple of options you can try:

    • Avada Theme Support: The best approach might be to reach out to Avada theme support directly. They might have specific recommendations for handling potential conflicts with The Events Calendar CSS or how to dequeue unnecessary styles on non-calendar pages.
    • Conditional Code Snippet (Advanced): This option requires some familiarity with WordPress code. You can try adding a code snippet to your theme’s functions.php file that checks if you’re on a non-calendar page and then dequeues the Events Calendar styles.

    Important Note: Modifying your theme’s functions.php file can potentially cause issues if not done correctly.

    It’s always a good idea to create a backup of your website before making any code changes.

    Here’s a general code snippet you can use as a starting point (use at your own risk):

    add_action( 'wp_enqueue_scripts', 'dequeue_events_calendar_styles' );
    
    function dequeue_events_calendar_styles() {
    if ( ! is_singular( 'tribe_events' ) ) { // Replace 'tribe_events' with your event post type slug if different
        wp_dequeue_style( 'tribe-events-calendar-style' );
    }
    }

    Resources:

    WordPress documentation on wp_enqueue_scripts: https://developer.www.ads-software.com/reference/functions/wp_enqueue_script/
    The Events Calendar documentation on Dequeuing Javascript Files: https://theeventscalendar.com/knowledgebase/dequeuing-javascript-files/

    Thread Starter Generosus

    (@generosus)

    Hi Darian and Cheska,

    Thank you so much for your feedback. Unfortunately the information provided did not help.

    However, after posting this topic, we learned the developers of Avada plan to refactor their (inline) code to remove all CSS Rules containing the CSS selector “.tribe” from non-calendar pages.

    Here’s a closer look at our issue (general discovery): https://prnt.sc/1XeOMep1-NA9

    So, for now, closing this topic as “Resolved” with Team TEC ??

    Thank you!

    Plugin Support Darian

    (@d0153)

    Hi @generosus

    Awesome! It’s really great to hear that Avada is planning to refactor the CSS class selectors.

    If you have some time to review, that would be amazing!

    https://www.ads-software.com/support/plugin/the-events-calendar/reviews/

Viewing 4 replies - 1 through 4 (of 4 total)
  • The topic ‘How to Remove “.tribe” from Non-Calendar Pages’ is closed to new replies.