Today I added a new plugin in my roster: AStickyPostOrdER.
AStickyPostOrdER, a plugin created by AndreSC, is a powerful addon to WordPress to touch it’s categories handling without messing up with the code.
Still in developement, the plugin augures well, thanks also to the interactivity of it’s developer that helped me to help him to resolve a problem in less than 24 hours.
As he asked, I’m writing that post to help people to see an example of the use of his plugin in a huge website like this with a lot of categories and sub-categories and a complex structure.
Actually, AStickyPostOrdER is helping me in the Music section…
But let’s start from the beginning:
What else to say…?
Thank you AndreSC !
I want to write something more than the last time about WordPress.
I also hope that in the future I will muse on more about publishing an article with so much hurry.
It’s not easy to use an instrument like this one, the faster it is, the less you can think when you use it.
That’s confusing, cause if blogging software is revolutioning the world making always more people settle on the web, it also make them produce more shit.
I have to think about it.
When I started to use WordPress, I was searching for a powerful blogging platform, easy to edit and customize, but also well developed.
At the beginning, I was dubious about WordPress… cause it seemed to me more a game than a blogging platform.
The platform itself was very basic, but a lot of people was using it, so I tryed to hold on and I looked it’s code.
The first feeling was friendly. I have always developed with php in that way, using a lot of inclusions to abstract up things… changing the behaviour of a page just including from a different source.
Also, the attempt to define a standard, the WordPress… functions and tags, was so appreciable.
So, I googled for”WordPress Themes” and also for “WordPress Plugins“, and a world opened in front of me.
A huge amount of websites, with a huge amount of code.
A Revolution, in the world of blogging.
It needed an in-depth examination.
First I tryed some plugins, amazing for me they was Plug & Play just like the hardware, and that their use don’t involve any change in the platform itself, at all.
I have also appreciated that a lot of official plugin exists, demonstrating that the WordPress stuff wanted originally a light and basic platform to spread in the web, and that everyone can download the extras he wants/needs.
That was encouraging.
Then, I tryed some themes. Amazing. A click, and go.
That is not really unusual in the world of the web platforms, but in WordPress you don’t change just a style or a template… you change everything.
Coding with WordPress is like doing a website with a more powerful version of php, able to fetch posts, pages, display their links and navigation gadgets with just a row of code.
Also, the tags makes it very easy to extract sensible data from the posts/pages, making it possible to do a cross-blog theme in few minutes.
And that, is what I did. Yes… not really in few minutes… but everything needs it’s time, if you want to do it well.
Definitive solutions are rare in a world that change every day like the world of Web Developement.
However, to do a website like this, to publish my thoughts, my photos; to create something that people can see with any kind of additional intervent by me, a solid base is important.
Publishing of images is also very important for me, cause manage thousands of photos is hard, and also, once their online you always want to be sure that they are viewable and that the way you use to reference (so show) them in the posts will never change.
Infact, my idea of weblog is not limited to “post articles and upload photos” but also to put that all togheter.
A post with some images inside it, will tempt the reader to see other images, and also an image can express things often a lot better than words.
In this sense, my choice of image publishing web-platform was very hard, cause the two most popular plugins that do this on WordPress seems really similar but are a lot different.
This plugins are, of course, WPG2 and NextGEN Gallery.
After a forum discussion I did in both the sides, I found in Alex Rabe the developer of NextGEN Gallery a better developer to work with.
Friendly, Avaiable, and also similar to me.
We share the same motto, “learning by doing”, and we both like photography.
So, if you’re deciding wich plugin to use between WPG2 and NextGEN Gallery, and you googled here, consider reading this “pros and cons“ before doing your choice:
In the future, I hope to help Alex Rabe in the improvement and developement of this wonderful plugin.
By now, I have only done a plugin for it to display random and recent albums, that I’m using in my website in this page.
NextGEN Gallery is the plugin I’m using for this website.
An image publishing plugin for NextGEN Gallery done by image publishers.
My second article in this section wants to give thanks to all the persons that have written the free plugins for WordPress I’m using.
Other plugins I’m using are:
The first post I want to do in the Web Developement section is about WordPress.
WordPress is really an amazing blogging platform.
If someone asks me “I have to do a website… can you give me some tips?”
WordPress is my answer.
In the past I have always done websites with notepad from the beginning to the end, passing through the “database fight” and the “styling match”.
WordPress, makes things easyer for everyone.
First of all, it puts down a standard, and I like standards.
A standard of data-structure, a standard of website administration and managament, a standard of blogging.
And standards are useful, cause happy coding brings clean code, and like they say theirselves, “code is poetry”.
I fought a lot with WordPress in these weeks, but at the end, I get in touch with it.
I don’t want to do technical articles about WordPress, cause honestly there is a lot of people that know it better than me.
This is just a post to say them “thank you”, I hope that one day I will be able to give back something of what you gave to me.
If you need further informations about WordPress, a good website to get started, is it’s website: wordpress.org