tetele
Forum Replies Created
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Sorry, there’s no release plan for this plugin, as I haven’t got the time to maintain it anymore. But i’d be happy to integrate patches into it.
Thanks!
Hmm, that will be an admin option in the future version of the plugin.
Now you have to explicitly opt-in for scheduling, either from the interface or from code. I haven’t thought about the XML-RPC case.
Thanks!
I’ve fixed the settings issue in 0.9.1. Now settings are properly saved the first time.
It was a bug. Fixed in 0.9.1, thanks for the heads up.
Fixed in 0.9.1
Forum: Plugins
In reply to: [Automatic Post Scheduler] [Plugin: Automatic Post Scheduler] First RunI’ve checked and that seems to be an issue. Not sure why it’s happening, but I’ll look into it and fix it.
Thanks for the heads up!
Forum: Plugins
In reply to: [Automatic Post Scheduler] [Plugin: Automatic Post Scheduler] First RunIt seems like you’re doing it by the book. I’m not sure what the problem really is.
Did you save the settings? If you go back to the writing settings screen can you see your updated values?
What version of WP / PHP are you using?
Wow! That’s an excellent idea, Erika!
I’m not necessarily thinking of emails though, but rather popups in the dashboard. Or both, maybe.
If we’re talking about emails, who should get them? Administrators? Editors?
Thanks for the message!
I understand, but as you pointed out at first, this is not possible. What the plugin does is schedule posts.
What’s the difference between manually scheduled and automatically scheduled posts? None. Therefore it’s impossible to choose when to ignore the manually scheduled posts.
But if you come up with an idea to solve this, one that could be used by many people, not just you, I’d be happy to implement it.
But what happens when you first schedule a post? Obviously, there will be no previously queued posts, right? At least not automatically…
Or maybe I don’t fully understand your question.
That’s weird, it should be enough to publish a post sooner than the minimum 15 minutes in your case and the scheduler should kick in automatically. I’ll look into it, thanks for the heads up.
Regarding editing, you’re right, that’s a pretty big bug I’m going to have to solve until the next version.
Thank you for your feedback!
Hey ivalegre!
Thanks for posting! I’ll do my best and explain these things in either the help menu, the plugin FAQ, the plugin description, or all of them combined.
To answer here as well, the plugin randomly picks a new interval between min & max and schedules the new post to be published at that random moment in time (based on the latest published/scheduled post time). If you want all your posts 2h apart, for example, just set min=max=2h.
Forum: Plugins
In reply to: [Posts 2 Posts] [Plugin: Posts 2 Posts] Permalink structure for nested postsActually, the scenario goes even futher, having events (another custom post type) linked to zones (one to one relationship).
So, the full hierarchy of taxonomies (not necessarily in the WordPress sense) is something like town->zone->event[->something else, optionally]. I thought I could model this using the plugin. In fact, I *can* do that, but the permalink structure is giving me a very hard time.
Still, your idea of using custom taxonomies is excellent! Both towns and zones could just be taxonomies for the event custom post type, which just leaves the permalink structure to deal with. I found some useful hints here and I’d be very thankful if you could point out any others.
Thanks!
That sounds a lot better. I’ll give it some more thought and implement it.
I’m not entirely satisfied with the interface you’re proposing, but I do agree that some means of selecting whether you want to use the plugin or not depending on context (or author) is necessary.
I’ll give it a thought and include it in the next minor version.
Thanks a lot for the heads up!