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Brad DaltonParticipant
You could use the Genesis simple sidebars plugin and a different page template under layout settings. On top of this you can style the page using custom body classes and even convert the page template to a post template if needed.
Not sure this is what you need but its an idea which may help.
January 15, 2013 at 3:54 am in reply to: WordPress SEO by Yoast v1.3.4.4 does not work with Genesis Framework v1.9 #12024Brad DaltonParticipantYou don't need Yoasts plugin with Genesis as the Framework includes SEO settings already. Why complicate it?
I actually used SEO data transporter and moved my SEO settings from Yoast to Genesis because Yoasts plugin cuased sitemap errors. Errors which have gone totally since making the move.
Brad DaltonParticipantThe fonts i used in my reply are an example only.
Interesting comment on the qoutes Gary because many of the StudioPress child themes use qoutes on single word font names.
Brad DaltonParticipantYou mean your sites title and tagline?
You'll find the CSS in your child themes style.css file. Try Line 22
Prose is a bit different than the other themes and may even offer a setting for this.
Try looking in your Genesis > Design Settings
Otherwise:
#title-area #title a,
#title-area #title a:hover {
font-family: "Palatino Linotype", "Book Antiqua", Palatino, serif;
}#title-area #description {
font-family: "Palatino Linotype", "Book Antiqua", Palatino, serif;
}
Brad DaltonParticipantYou'd want to test that code on a local installation first.
Not sure why you'd want to do it that way when the plugin makes it far easier and more flexible.
You can also reposition the seconday nav and deregister the primary nav easily.
http://www.briangardner.com/code/reposition-navigation/
Brad DaltonParticipantWhy don't you use the full width template on posts rather than change all the code?
Brad DaltonParticipant.menu-primary,
.menu-secondary {
font-family: 'Arial', Georgia, Times Roman;
}
Brad DaltonParticipantWhat exactly did you change?
Normally this is caused by a HTML or CSS error.
Paste a link to your site please.
Brad DaltonParticipant/** Reposition the secondary navigation menu */
remove_action( 'genesis_after_header', 'genesis_do_subnav' );
add_action( 'genesis_before_header', 'genesis_do_subnav' );http://my.studiopress.com/snippets/navigation-menus/
Paste the code in to your child themes functions.php file
Backup first
Brad DaltonParticipant#title a, #title a:hover {
color: red;
font-family: 'Times New Roman',serif;
}Can also change the color or delete that declaration
#title a, #title a:hover {
font-family: 'Lato',serif;
}You'll also need to install Google fonts in the style.css file
Example: /*
01 Import Fonts
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */@import url(http://fonts.googleapis.com/css?family=Lato:400,700);
Brad DaltonParticipantJanuary 12, 2013 at 10:11 am in reply to: How to customize navbar for specific page template? #11451Brad DaltonParticipantTry installing the Genesis Simple Menu's plugin
Create a custom menu and select it for use on the pages/posts you want to display it on
Brad DaltonParticipantInstall the Genesis Simple Hooks plugin and add the code to this code http://pastebin.com/sUbAPcv8
Paste it into the hook location using the plugin
Brad DaltonParticipantThat code won't work then.
You'll need a conditional statement and use the Genesis Simple Hooks plugin.
http://codex.wordpress.org/Conditional_Tags#A_Category_Page
There's a few ways to do this.
You could also create a widget area using the conditional tag.
Click To Grab The Code From Pastebin
Paste the code into the hook location you want to display your image and paste the HTML for your image between the tags.
genesis_after_header Hook
This hook executes immediately after the header (outside the #header div).
Make sure you have access to FTP or File manager in cPanel.
Code is tested
Brad DaltonParticipantBrad DaltonParticipantJoking. Try this:
#content #genesis-responsive-slider h2 a {
text-align: center;
}
Brad DaltonParticipantBrad DaltonParticipantYou'll probably need to write some custom functions using conditional tags.
Might be a good idea to test this on a local installation before using the code on a live site
http://wordpress.org/support/topic/using-conditional-tags-to-display-different-menus
Brad DaltonParticipantYou can do this at least 2 ways:
1. Install WordPress on the new domain and install Genesis with your new theme
Import your content from the other domain into your new site using the export/import tool
2. Install Genesis and new theme on your old domain and then move the entire site to the new domain.
You can use the WP Migrate DB plugin to change all the urls in the old DB to the new domain and server paths
Then import the DB into a new DB connected to the new domain
Upload your old files to the new domains root directory and change the DB details in the wp-config.php to the new DB details
Brad DaltonParticipant.page .entry-title {
text-align: center;
}Paste this into the end of your child themes style.css file
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