WordPress

  • The Road Ahead: What’s in Store for WordPress for the Rest of 2020?

    The Road Ahead: What’s in Store for WordPress for the Rest of 2020?

    Josepha Haden, executive director of WordPress, provided a progress update on the 2020 goals in early March. As always, the timeline to hit certain goals can change based on roadblocks the development team hits and other factors. On the whole, the tentative roadmap looks feasible. Currently, WordPress 5.5 is set to ship on August 11,…

  • Editor Will Default to Fullscreen Mode in WordPress 5.4

    Editor Will Default to Fullscreen Mode in WordPress 5.4

    Riad Benguella announced on the core development blog last week the editor in WordPress 5.4 will ship in fullscreen mode by default. While some form of fullscreen or distraction-free writing has existed for years in the core platform, this marks the first time WordPress will make it the default experience. Not all installations will see…

  • WordPress 5.4 Beta 1 Ready for Testing and Feedback

    WordPress 5.4 Beta 1 Ready for Testing and Feedback

    Release coordinator Francesca Marano announced the release of WordPress 5.4 Beta 1 on February 11. Most of the work has centered on the block editor. However, at the moment, contributors have closed another 258 tickets for the 5.4 milestone. A second beta release is scheduled for February 18, according to the 5.4 release schedule, along…

  • Reflecting on 2019: The Year in Review

    Reflecting on 2019: The Year in Review

    Another year is in the bag. With a project as large and far-reaching as WordPress, there was no shortage of news and controversy. We covered a lot of stories in 2019 and are gearing up for another exciting year. I always like to take a moment at the end of the year to look over…

  • WordPress 5.3.2 Addresses a Handful of Bugs

    WordPress 5.3.2 Addresses a Handful of Bugs

    On December 18, less than a week since WordPress 5.3.1 security update shipped to the masses, the core team dropped a version 5.3.2 maintenance release. No security issues were named in this update. Instead, 5.3.2 addresses a couple of high-priority bugs along with a few other issues. Users with automatic updates enabled should already be…

  • WordPress 5.3.1 Includes Security and Bug Fixes, Accessibility Enhancements, and Twenty Twenty Changes

    WordPress 5.3.1 Includes Security and Bug Fixes, Accessibility Enhancements, and Twenty Twenty Changes

    WordPress 5.3.1 was released today with 46 bug fixes and enhancements. Changes include several accessibility improvements and four security vulnerability fixes. The update includes multiple changes to the default Twenty Twenty theme. Version 5.3.1 is a security and maintenance release. All users are encouraged to update as soon as possible. For those with auto-updates enabled,…

  • WordPress 5.3 “Kirk” Released, Brings New Default Theme, Editor Improvements, and UI Tweaks

    WordPress 5.3 “Kirk” Released, Brings New Default Theme, Editor Improvements, and UI Tweaks

    WordPress 5.3 “Kirk,” named in honor American jazz musician Rahsaan Roland Kirk, is now available for download. The update includes a new default theme named Twenty Twenty, user interface improvements aimed at accessibility, and new block editor features. This release saw contributions from 645 volunteers, which is the largest contributor group ever for a WordPress…

  • WordPress 5.3 Improves Large Image Handling

    WordPress 5.3 Improves Large Image Handling

    WordPress 5.3 Beta 3 was released this week and RC 1 is right around the corner, expected October 15. Core contributors have been publishing developer notes on new features landing in this release. One exciting enhancement that hasn’t received much attention yet is WordPress’ updated handling of large images. Many WordPress users don’t consider the…

  • WordPress 5.3 to Introduce New Admin Email Verification Screen

    WordPress 5.3 to Introduce New Admin Email Verification Screen

    WordPress 5.3 is set to introduce an admin email verification screen that will be shown every six months after an admin has logged in. The feature was proposed seven months ago in a ticket that contributor Andrei Draganescu opened as part of the Site Health component improvements. Draganescu said the idea came from discussions in…

  • Gutenberg 6.5 Adds Experimental Block Directory Search to Inserter and New Social Links Block

    Gutenberg 6.5 Adds Experimental Block Directory Search to Inserter and New Social Links Block

    Gutenberg 6.5 was released today with a rough prototype that adds one-click search and installation of blocks from the block directory to the inserter. Selected blocks are automatically installed as a plugin in the background and inserted into the editor with one click. The pull request for the experiment indicates that it’s still very much…

  • Gutenberg Team Explores the Future of Full-Site Editing with New Prototype

    Gutenberg Team Explores the Future of Full-Site Editing with New Prototype

    From its inception, the block editor was always intended to be more than just an editor for the main content area. Gutenberg phase 2 brings the block editor to other parts of the site, including widgets, menus, and other aspects of site customization. Matias Ventura, one of the lead engineers on the project, has offered…

  • WordPress Poised to Begin Implementing Proposal to Auto-Update Older Sites to 4.7

    WordPress Poised to Begin Implementing Proposal to Auto-Update Older Sites to 4.7

    WordPress contributors from around the world joined in a lively meeting yesterday to continue the discussion regarding the proposal to auto-update old sites to version 4.7 in a controlled rollout. The idea is that sites would gradually update from one major version to the next (not all at once). The discussion was led by WordPress…

  • Proposal to Auto-Update Old Versions of WordPress to 4.7 Sparks Heated Debate

    Proposal to Auto-Update Old Versions of WordPress to 4.7 Sparks Heated Debate

    WordPress contributors, developers, and community members are currently debating a proposal to would implement a new policy regarding security support for older versions. The discussion began last week when security team lead Jake Spurlock asked for feedback on different approaches to backporting security fixes to older versions. Following up on this discussion, Ian Dunn, a…