How To Welcome Commenters, Lesson #43

To those using comment moderation on their blog, here is a simple trick that should become part of every theme. I just left a comment on Logo Design Love, an empyreal blog about logo design by David Airey. My comment went into moderation as per his comment policy, but instead of the standard message you've been told a million times…

Plugin Reviews Aftermath: Novice Tips

The plugin quick reviews I recently did (Plugin Competition roundup, part 1, part 2) got two consequences so far. First, they generated some feedback from readers asking for insights or advices, and second, they quite left me in perplex astonishment regarding how many coders ship plugin with messy code. About the second point, I threw together some personal thoughts and…

What Plugin Coders Must Know About WordPress 2.6

A WordPress install is a bunch of directories and files, but two of them are particular: the file wp-config.php and the directory wp-content/ are personal and don't get overwritten when you upgrade your blog. In WordPress 2.6, they get so personal that you can even move them out of the WordPress root. This must bring a major change to your…

WordPress Plugin Coding Tips

Stephen, on his geek blog Nerdaphernalia, is running a series of excellent posts giving advices to plugin authors for neat subtle effects: adding a "Configure" link right next to the "Activate" link on the Plugins page, or how to give credit to your plugin without cluttering the page (I'm a big fan of the "Configure" link trick, that I've added…

I just found out something that some will find obvious: from the trunk page of the WordPress SVN repository (or WordPress Mu, or anything that uses Trac really) there's a link at the very bottom of the page that will send you a fresh build in a zip archive. Handy for when you don't have an SVN install to play with.

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J'ai découvert récemment la version light sans pub d'Allociné. Exemple : www (avec pubs) et www-org (sans pub). Super hein.

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