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  • Same issue here… Still happening 3 months later.

    I’m having this problem as well. Did you solve it?

    Any update on this? I’ve twisted a client’s arm into signing up for the Premium version of your plugin in the hope this feature isn’t far off.

    Thread Starter maushawk

    (@maushawk)

    Rolling back didn’t work after all. Now all Woocommerce areas of the admin panel display a blank screen with this error message:

    “There has been a critical error on your website. Please check your site admin email inbox for instructions.”

    Thread Starter maushawk

    (@maushawk)

    Thanks for the help Aert. I created a shortcode to display the Accept Cookies link if the user has not accepted cookies, so I can place it anywhere I need it.

    Maybe this would be a useful addition to the plugin for similar cases where it blocks content but doesn’t show a notice automatically?

    Thread Starter maushawk

    (@maushawk)

    Thanks for the reply Aert.

    I’m using a combination of WPCF7 & Recaptcha v3, and a user registration plugin with Recaptcha v2.

    From the link above, this would be a suitable workaround:
    “Use: Accept Cookies as a link, or button, before the conditional load of ReCaptcha and/or submit button, so cookies have to be accepted before submitting the form.”

    I’m not sure what the Accept Cookies link should be? On the cookie banner it’s a button without a href so I can’t copy & paste it.

    I don’t use Tag Manager, should I be using it?

    Thread Starter maushawk

    (@maushawk)

    Sounds like I’ll need to modify the site and use something else to display the video then. Thanks for looking into it!

    Thread Starter maushawk

    (@maushawk)

    Thanks for the quick reply Rogier.

    The issue I’m having is that on a page I built with Elementor, a section uses a Youtube video as a background but Complianz doesn’t block it by default even though videos embedded as content are blocked.

    Here’s an example page I’ve set up so you can see what I mean:

    https://example.test-platform.co.uk

    • This reply was modified 5 years, 7 months ago by maushawk.
    Thread Starter maushawk

    (@maushawk)

    Yes I know, it sucks when hard work receives criticism. But you can’t take this personally. The rating is for a piece of software you made, not for you as a developer.

    I gave it 1 star for two reasons:

    1. It doesn’t work with the most popular free page builder plugin. I’ve seen other people commenting that it also didn’t work with Visual Composer.

    2. Posts asking for help on the Github page AND the plugin support forum went unanswered for over a month. (You don’t have time to acknowledge support requests, but you’ve got time to argue back against a 1 star rating within 24 hours so that doesn’t make me feel more sympathetic.) This means it’s unsupported and that’s helpful to know when deciding what plugin to install on a site.

    The plugin would deserve 3 stars if you were actively working on bug reports and answering support requests, or if it had no support but also didn’t have gamebreaking compatibility issues with other really commonly used plugins.

    If you’ve shelved the project because you don’t have time for it – it’s a free plugin, you’re not obliged to keep supporting it – then you have to accept that people will warn other users about problems it has. If you fix the bug I’ll happily change the rating.

    • This reply was modified 5 years, 7 months ago by maushawk.
    • This reply was modified 5 years, 7 months ago by maushawk.
    Thread Starter maushawk

    (@maushawk)

    Of course life comes before plugins, but reviews are to help other users know whether there are known issues, to help them make informed decisions, troubleshoot, and save time. This plugin has issues unfortunately.

    • This reply was modified 5 years, 7 months ago by maushawk.

    Well I ended up having to style the Popup Title image differently for Firefox than all other browsers. I also removed <div class="popup-image"> from class-sticky-popup.php and added class="popup-hamburger" to the <img> tag directly. The code isn’t pretty but it works for me.

    Firefox is treating the popup tab as if the elements are stacked vertically within it, and all other browsers are treating the elements as if they are aligned horizontally and rotated 90 deg…

    All browsers:

    .sticky-popup .popup-hamburger { transform: rotate(90deg); margin-left: 15px; width: 80%; }
    .sticky-popup span.popup-title { font-size: 13pt; letter-spacing: -0.4px; width: 26px; }

    Firefox only:

    @-moz-document url-prefix() {
    	.sticky-popup .popup-hamburger, .sticky-popup span.popup-title  { transform: none; }
    	.sticky-popup .popup-hamburger { margin-top: 15px; margin-left: 0;  width: 90%;}
    }

    Yep, this is happening on two sites I’ve used this plugin (where the popup tab is placed vertically at the side). I just noticed it today – it was working fine a couple of weeks ago. The plugin hasn’t been updated in over a year so it looks like a recent Firefox update has broken it.

    As Firefox and Chrome handle CSS transforms differently we’ll need to use a fix which only targets Firefox. Add this line to your theme’s custom CSS:

    .sticky-popup span.popup-title { -moz-transform: none; }

    If you use an image on the tab then that’ll also need fixed… I’m still working on that. You can try using <img src='www.url.com/image.png'> in the Popup Title field on the settings page, just be careful – don’t use double quotes (“) as they’ll break the form field and you’ll need to restore a database backup or go into PHPMyAdmin and fix it manually…

Viewing 12 replies - 1 through 12 (of 12 total)