Forum Replies Created
-
AuthorPosts
-
Victor FontModerator
I've updated quite a few sites without any issues. I'm not seeing any persisiten notifications about Genesis 2.6. Sometimes caching will cause notifications to persist. Clear all caches and see if the notification goes away. If not, you'll probably need to report the issue to Studio Press directly at https://my.studiopress.com/help/. This is beyond what we can help you with as a community volunteer forum.
Regards,
Victor
https://victorfont.com/
Call us toll free: 844-VIC-FONT (842-3668)
Have you requested your free website audit yet?March 14, 2018 at 1:23 pm in reply to: What is the "Best Practice" when adding body class to landing page template #217894Victor FontModeratorIt really doesn't matter where you add a body class. If it works as you intended, then wherever you placed it is just fine. The developers who told you this is wrong probably have their own definition of best practice.
In general, what works for me is considering the scope. If I'm adding a body class and it applies to a single template only, then scope is template and that's where the code goes. If I place single-template code in functions.php, then I'd have to edit functions.php for every website where I wanted to use that template. Does that make sense? Placing it in the template means the code travels with the template.
Now, if scope if broader than a single template, I consider whether the code is for a single site, or if I can use it globally across many sites. I'd choose functions.php for single-site and my custom function library for global use.
Regards,
Victor
https://victorfont.com/
Call us toll free: 844-VIC-FONT (842-3668)
Have you requested your free website audit yet?Victor FontModeratorIt's an XML file. You have to copy and paste the code into a local file, save it to your machine and import it into WordPress.
Regards,
Victor
https://victorfont.com/
Call us toll free: 844-VIC-FONT (842-3668)
Have you requested your free website audit yet?Victor FontModeratorMobile responsiveness is a function of CSS. You'd have to create media query breakpoints and write all of the CSS required for the job. It would really be a whole lot easier and time saving to start with a HTML5 theme that is already responsive. You may have to tweak some things, but you'll be able to leave the Tylenol bottle in the medicine cabinet.
Regards,
Victor
https://victorfont.com/
Call us toll free: 844-VIC-FONT (842-3668)
Have you requested your free website audit yet?Victor FontModeratorThis forum has nothing to do with Studio Press sites. We're a volunteer community that answers questions about Studio Press themes and the Genesis Framework. We have no affiliation with Studio Press. You need to contact Studio Press Support. https://my.studiopress.com/help/
Regards,
Victor
https://victorfont.com/
Call us toll free: 844-VIC-FONT (842-3668)
Have you requested your free website audit yet?Victor FontModeratorIf you post a link, we could take a look. In general though, I use https://color.adobe.com/ to help determine color schemes. Maybe it will help you.
Regards,
Victor
https://victorfont.com/
Call us toll free: 844-VIC-FONT (842-3668)
Have you requested your free website audit yet?Victor FontModeratorThe favicon is displaying fine. You may be running into a caching issue. Also, with WordPress, it's not necessary to use a favicon any longer. The WordPress site identity replaces the favicon and provides you with site tiles for mobile devices.
Regards,
Victor
https://victorfont.com/
Call us toll free: 844-VIC-FONT (842-3668)
Have you requested your free website audit yet?Victor FontModeratorWhen you remove the header in customizer, you also trigger the text title and description to display. The customizer header hides these things. Use your browser's built-in inspection tool to find the CSS that displays the text elements and set them to display: none in your style sheet. https://victorfont.com/how-to-use-your-browsers-inspect-tool/
Regards,
Victor
https://victorfont.com/
Call us toll free: 844-VIC-FONT (842-3668)
Have you requested your free website audit yet?Victor FontModeratorThe new Genesis Sample theme that is currently in Beta should be fine for what you want to do. https://demo.studiopress.com/genesis-sample-beta/
Regards,
Victor
https://victorfont.com/
Call us toll free: 844-VIC-FONT (842-3668)
Have you requested your free website audit yet?March 11, 2018 at 11:37 am in reply to: identify add filter item in my Magazine pro functions.php #217760Victor FontModeratorIt is not default to Magazine Pro. Someone had to have added it to your functions.php. If it wasn't you, then it could have been a plugin. I don't think a developer would have added anything right after the opening tag before the theme is even initialized.
Regards,
Victor
https://victorfont.com/
Call us toll free: 844-VIC-FONT (842-3668)
Have you requested your free website audit yet?Victor FontModeratorGlad you figured it out.
Regards,
Victor
https://victorfont.com/
Call us toll free: 844-VIC-FONT (842-3668)
Have you requested your free website audit yet?Victor FontModeratorAny Studio Press theme can be used for a blog with a slider. Pick one that represents your vision and pleases your eye aesthetically.
Regards,
Victor
https://victorfont.com/
Call us toll free: 844-VIC-FONT (842-3668)
Have you requested your free website audit yet?Victor FontModeratorThis is not a forum bug. You marked the thread as resolved. Once you mark a post as resolved, it is closed to further comments.
Regards,
Victor
https://victorfont.com/
Call us toll free: 844-VIC-FONT (842-3668)
Have you requested your free website audit yet?Victor FontModeratorI'm glad you found a solution and marked this as resolved. Since you have, I'll close this to further comments.
Regards,
Victor
https://victorfont.com/
Call us toll free: 844-VIC-FONT (842-3668)
Have you requested your free website audit yet?Victor FontModeratorAny Studio Press theme can be used for any purpose. It's your vision and subjective choice that matters. Choose a theme that comes close to what you are seeking and have at it.
Regards,
Victor
https://victorfont.com/
Call us toll free: 844-VIC-FONT (842-3668)
Have you requested your free website audit yet?Victor FontModeratorPlease be more specific. Which buttons on what page?
Regards,
Victor
https://victorfont.com/
Call us toll free: 844-VIC-FONT (842-3668)
Have you requested your free website audit yet?Victor FontModeratorTry this: https://www.studiopress.com/colored-content-boxes-buttons/
Regards,
Victor
https://victorfont.com/
Call us toll free: 844-VIC-FONT (842-3668)
Have you requested your free website audit yet?Victor FontModeratorWhy not just use a form tool like Formidable Pro or Gravity Forms?
Regards,
Victor
https://victorfont.com/
Call us toll free: 844-VIC-FONT (842-3668)
Have you requested your free website audit yet?Victor FontModeratorAdd a priority to the add_action so it executes later in the stack: https://developer.wordpress.org/reference/functions/add_action/
Regards,
Victor
https://victorfont.com/
Call us toll free: 844-VIC-FONT (842-3668)
Have you requested your free website audit yet?Victor FontModeratorI'm halfway through writing a tutorial about creating your own custom Guten-blocks. This article forced me to take a deep dive into the Gutenberg architecture. I have also read one article released by the Studio Press team about integrating theme styles with Gutenberg.
The deep dive I'm doing resulted in at least one surprise and one concern. The surprise is that Gutenberg still uses the TinyMCE editor at it's core for creating/saving/editing content enabled blocks. Even toolbar components such as the text alignment bar are derived from TinyMCE. That is, at least for now. I don't know if that's going to change in the future.
The concern is with content created before Gutenberg. I created a fresh WordPress install to work on this tutorial. When I opened the default WordPress sample page in Gutenberg, it automatically opened in the code editor rather than the visual editor. In fact, trying to display it in the visual editor produces an error message. Until you convert old content into blocks, which is as far as I can tell a manual process at this point, you can't see them in the visual editor. This is going to be a lot of work if you have to edit older content, especially if the articles are lengthy. Many end users rely on the visual editor. If they can't use it, they're going to get lost.
As Gutenberg matures, it will eventually become the only method for content management in WordPress. It won't matter if you're working on widgets, in the customizer, pages, posts, CPTs, or even the menu, Gutenberg will be the interface. I sympathize for website builders who have staked their businesses on page builders. Gutenberg is poised to eventually eliminate page builders as we know them, especially the ones that intrusively insert shortcodes into content. Unless their architectures change, I'm betting that they are not going to be compatible with future versions of WordPress.
As for Genesis, I have not seen anything in Gutenberg so far to be concerned about. As the new content editor, all Gutenberg content will be accessed and displayed in the Genesis loop. Anything else that Genesis does is not impacted by Gutenberg. That may change as Gutenberg continues to progress and takes over other WordPress areas. But for today, it's not even worth devoting any energy thinking about it.
Regards,
Victor
https://victorfont.com/
Call us toll free: 844-VIC-FONT (842-3668)
Have you requested your free website audit yet? -
AuthorPosts