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PorterParticipant
Have you tried backing up and deleting .htaccess file? What about taking a look through your wp-config file to see if there's anything going on there? (try grabbing a clean wp-config file from a fresh install, and copying over the important user / db information from your current file, to a fresh one).
After you attempt to log in, can you manually enter the URL of http://sylviabrowder.com/wp-admin and be logged in, or does that redirect / say you're not logged in?
PorterParticipantThe actual section on the home page appears to be custom, using the "Basic Jquery Slider" plugin for the sliding effect. The page with the reviews itself I'm unsure, but it's also likely manual, as it's just a bunch of images, no text, which seems like a very odd / inefficient format to store / quote reviews.
PorterParticipantYay German beer! I'll enjoy it for sure, thanks 🙂
As for why your fix worked, I can only assume that something is going wrong with how your child theme style.css is being read. Do other changes you make to style.css take effect? style.css in your child theme should be where 99% of all of your CSS edits go, so if that's not working, you may want to look into it! Either way, glad you got it working, and good luck with the site!
PorterParticipantI really don't know, that's the selector the inspector is giving me in Chrome. It's all kind of a mess, with no particularly clear way on how to target that specific area, but that, and "body.serif.dark" are the pieces I see that pertain to it (though I believe the latter isn't specific to that page, and is part of your theme).
I would either try using body.serif.dark as the selector (just to test), or try adding !important to all of your rules above, like so:
div#disqus_thread { background-color: #ffffff !important; border-radius: 3px !important; padding: 12px !important; color: #666 !important; }
I added the 666, as the text down on the bottom is white, and wasn't visible. Also check to make sure your page isn't cashed, and use an incognito window or something.
PorterParticipantDue to the way your .widget and .post share so much common styling, the easiest way is to honestly override the border when on the home page, like so:
.home .post { border: none; }
Add that to style.css, and it's a quick and easy fix. If you're up to it, you can decouple your .widget and .post code a bit (if they don't share every aspect, separate it), and then make some classes specific to the areas needed. That being said, the above works, so don't over-complicate things if you don't feel the need.
PorterParticipantThis should do the trick - add this to style.css:
div#disqus_thread { background-color: #ffffff; border-radius: 3px; padding: 12px; }
I added the 3px border-radius to match your above section, and the 12px of padding makes it look a lot better than without. Let me know if it works!
PorterParticipantDid you make any edits directly to the Genesis core files? Updating Genesis shouldn't effect anything visually, if it does, you likely made changes to the core files, which is something you should never do (for this exact reason).
Something I did notice, is that you're using .one-third for your 3 widget areas, but you also have this:
margin-left: 2.564102564102564%;
With those margins, you're exceeding 100% (one third x 3, + 2.5% margins), which is why your 3rd widget is being pushed down. Again, I'm not sure if the issue is in changes you made to the core files, or what I'm referring to above, but maybe that'll help.
November 21, 2015 at 1:32 pm in reply to: Remove Date on Post Byline in Home Page Widget / Church Theme #171720PorterParticipantThe above didn't work, I believe I used the wrong hook on the remove_action. That being said, this is more specific, and I just tested it:
add_filter( 'genesis_post_info','porter_remove_home_post_info'); function porter_remove_home_post_info() { if (is_home() || is_front_page()) { $post_info = 'By [post_author_posts_link] [post_comments] [post_edit]'; return $post_info; } }
That will keep the author and comments, and edit button, but removes the date.
November 21, 2015 at 1:20 pm in reply to: Remove Date on Post Byline in Home Page Widget / Church Theme #171718PorterParticipantThis should do the trick, for home page only:
add_action('genesis_before_loop','porter_remove_home_post_info'); function porter_remove_home_post_info() { if (is_home() || is_front_page()) { remove_action( 'genesis_before_post_content', 'genesis_post_info' ); } }
Add the above to your functions.php file.
PorterParticipantYou should be able to go into your Appearance > Widgets section, and remove the "AgentPress - Listing Search" widget from the "Search Bar" widget area. You can actually add anything you want to that widget area if you choose to use that location, so keep that in mind.
If that for some reason fails, a quick and dirty solution that will remove ANY search box on your site (assuming the class it uses is "search-bar"), is to add the following CSS to your style.css file:
Find:
.search-bar { background: rgb(0, 0, 0); background: rgba(0, 0, 0, .8); padding: 30px 0; }
Change it to:
.search-bar { display: none; }
EDIT - I just realized you wanted to remove the entire area, not just that widget. The CSS solution above should work.
PorterParticipantDue to the way the theme works, it's a tad bit tricky. The spacing stems from this:
.front-page-2, .front-page-3, .front-page-4, .front-page-5, .front-page-6, .front-page-7 { border-top: 54px solid transparent; margin-top: -54px; -webkit-background-clip: padding-box; -moz-background-clip: padding; background-clip: padding-box; position: relative; z-index: 9; }
Specifically the 54px border-top, and the -54px margin-top. These changes apply to 2-7, as you can see in the selectors at the top of the code, so changing this effects the spacing on ALL areas. If you want to effect just 5, you would add something like this:
.front-page-5 { background-image: url(//demo.studiopress.com/altitude/wp-content/themes/altitude-pro/images/bg-5.jpg); border-top: 64px; margin-top: -64px; }
.front-page-5 already exists, so find that in style.css, and add the border and margin I added. Play around with the sizes to get it to look how you'd prefer, 64 is just my example.
PorterParticipantIt's working perfectly for me on desktop, at full width, and minimized a bit to use the media queries. Did you solve this, or are you still having issues?
PorterParticipantI've been pulled from the 2014 grave! 😉
Definitely start your own thread, I'll see about helping there.
PorterParticipantI cannot, but you can email me at Gemfruit at Gmail.com and I can check when I'm home in 20.
PorterParticipantWas the header full width before you installed the plugin? Looking at the demo page for Altitude Pro, it's full width by default, so I'm not sure why it isn't for you if that's the desired feel. It's quite hard to troubleshoot without access to the page, as this would let us inspect the CSS. Are you familiar with using the browser inspector to view elements and their CSS? My guess is that either the slider is adding some sort of padding, or your content or site-inner sections have something going on with them (padding, margin, or improper width). I can't speculate much more beyond that without seeing what's going on live.
PorterParticipantHmm, I see what you mean. I know they're naturally ordered by the order in which they're registered, but I can't imagine there isn't a way to manually change that order, yet I'm not finding one when I search.
PorterParticipantThis seems to offer all of the information you need - http://wordpress.stackexchange.com/questions/82362/reorder-dashboard-widgets
PorterParticipantRight now, your site-title and site-description are contained within title-area, which has a width of 100%. The items inside are also 100%, which is why they're each on their own row. The rule that makes them 100% s;
full-width .site-title { width: 100%; }
If you write a more specific rule to override that, you can set a different, non-100% rule:
.title-area h1.site-title { width: initial; float: left; }
Notice we added a float: left to move the site-title to the left, to make room for the description coming up. Find the following area, but add the last two lines:
.site-description { color: #f9859b; font-size: 12px; font-weight: 300; letter-spacing: 2px; line-height: 1; margin: 60px 0 0 0; float: left; }
We added float: left again to push this up next to the logo, and the margin 60px moves the text down from the top (the text defaults to top left corner, we're moving it down to align with the logo text). This margin rule also overrides a h1 margin rule, that was adding a bit of margin to the text.
You may need to do some tweaking to keep it mobile responsive (edit the media queries with similar logic), and if you want it centered, that'll require a bit of change, but that should send you in the right direction!
November 13, 2015 at 10:56 am in reply to: Conditionally Set Header Height on Portfolio Pages #171013PorterParticipantWhat do you mean by "conditionally", on certain pages? If you want it changed in general, that wouldn't really be conditionally, that would just be changed.
Additionally, please link to your site or state the theme so we can take a look.
PorterParticipantLink to your site please, or at least specify which theme you're using.
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