Tag: gutenberg

  • #1 – Josepha Haden Chomphosy on the Past, Present, and Future of WordPress

    #1 – Josepha Haden Chomphosy on the Past, Present, and Future of WordPress

    In this, the first episode of the WP Tavern Jukebox podcast, we talk to Josepha Haden Chomphosy. She is the Executive Director of the WordPress project, and discusses WordPress’ past, present and future. We talk about how WordPress has changed over time and what needs to be considered in the future, to keep the community…

  • Refactoring Gutenberg’s Gallery Block To Support Nested Images

    Refactoring Gutenberg’s Gallery Block To Support Nested Images

    Like many others, I often have pinned tabs of all sorts of things in my browser. Some of them linger there for months. Others for years, I shamefully admit. Of the handful of Gutenberg-related browser tabs I have had pinned since late 2020, one of them finally had the sort of movement I have been…

  • User-Friendly Methods for Testing Gutenberg Enhancements and Bug Fixes

    User-Friendly Methods for Testing Gutenberg Enhancements and Bug Fixes

    Living on the bleeding edge of Gutenberg’s development is not particularly easy for everyone. There is a ton of work and know-how involved with getting everything set up. You have to clone a Git repository, grab pull requests, and run a build process. Non-developers may find themselves facing an overwhelming learning curve. It can be…

  • Gutenberg 10.1 Enhances Reusable Blocks, Updates Social Icons Spacing Options, and Normalizes Image Block Toolbar

    Gutenberg 10.1 Enhances Reusable Blocks, Updates Social Icons Spacing Options, and Normalizes Image Block Toolbar

    Gutenberg 10.1 landed yesterday with several new features, many of which focused on improvements to the interface and user experience. Users can now control the justification of items in the Social Icons block. The new release also enhances the UX for creating reusable blocks, groups the Image block toolbar controls, and introduces categorized template parts…

  • Ask the Bartender: What Happens When Block Markup Changes?

    Ask the Bartender: What Happens When Block Markup Changes?

    I’m a developer that has started developing with Gutenberg recently. There are a bunch of amazing benefits and features, but there are also a ton of drawbacks, inconsistencies, as well as absolutely awful and outdated documentation. One of the worst aspects of Gutenberg from a developer perspective has been block validation. Consider the following scenario.…

  • The Gutenberg WordPress Plugin To Introduce a Table of Contents Block

    The Gutenberg WordPress Plugin To Introduce a Table of Contents Block

    What was once likely viewed as plugin territory is now a reality as part of the Gutenberg project. Yesterday, the team merged a pull request for a Table of Contents (TOC) block into the plugin’s codebase. It was a contribution driven by developer Zebulan Stanphill, starting nearly a year ago. The TOC block may feel…

  • FSE Outreach Round #2: Building a Custom Homepage With Gutenberg’s Site Editor

    FSE Outreach Round #2: Building a Custom Homepage With Gutenberg’s Site Editor

    Anne McCarthy announced the second round of testing for the Full Site Editing (FSE) Outreach program. The call for testing asks that users build a homepage from the Gutenberg plugin’s site editor. Feedback is open until March 5. The first round of testing began in December 2020 and ended last month. Testers were able to…

  • Ask the Bartender: Frustrations and Finding the Right WordPress Block Plugins

    Ask the Bartender: Frustrations and Finding the Right WordPress Block Plugins

    Hello. I always supported the idea of a WordPress block editor as a whole, but lately, I’m a bit frustrated in that there are some blocks I need with urgency to work on a (non-visitor editable) wiki-like site (mostly a Tabs block, a Countdown block, an Accordion/Toggle block, a Table of contents block and a…

  • Gutenberg Plugin Marks 100th Release with 10.0

    Gutenberg Plugin Marks 100th Release with 10.0

    Gutenberg 10.0 was released today as the 100th iteration of the block editor since the project began four years ago. Although 10.0 may seem like a big number, it’s just another incremental step forward in terms of new features, improvements, and bug fixes. Version 10.0 introduces a new dynamic pages block for building navigation menus.…

  • FSE and WordPress Themes: What Does the MVP Look Like?

    FSE and WordPress Themes: What Does the MVP Look Like?

    Josepha Haden Chomphosy, the Executive Director of WordPress, posted a follow-up to her outline of the upcoming year. Questions mounted about what a minimum viable product (MVP) looked like for Full Site Editing (FSE), which is expected to be ready in the Gutenberg plugin in April. The core team is also shooting for a June…

  • Gutenberg Contributors Consider Implementing a Bot to Close Stale Issues

    Gutenberg Contributors Consider Implementing a Bot to Close Stale Issues

    Gutenberg project contributors are considering implementing a stale bot to tame the repository’s overgrown issues queue, which currently has 2,733 open issues. Stale bots are usually employed to automatically close “stale” issues and PRs based on a predefined set of parameters for inactivity. “The current recommendation is to set our policy to a 180-day of…

  • First Round of the FSE Outreach Program Concludes, Identifies Template-Editing Mode Problems

    First Round of the FSE Outreach Program Concludes, Identifies Template-Editing Mode Problems

    The Full Site Editing (FSE) Outreach Program has now concluded its first round of testing. Its first focus area was centered on the template-editing mode introduced in Gutenberg 9.6. The volunteers involved with the project identified several pain points. Gutenberg 9.6 added a new button that allows end-users, provided they are using a block-based theme,…