The huge range of community-contributed plugins is one of the most valuable features of WordPress.org. But how do you determine what’s a safe and effective plugin without being overwhelmed by choice? Learn how to make an informed decision about which plugin to use – and how to troubleshoot any conflicts that may crop up.
1. Passionate
ABOUT
Plugins
Kathryn Presner @zoonini
WordCamp Montreal 2012 #wcmtl
2. Kathryn Presner
•Automattic Happiness Engineer as of Monday
•WordPress.org support-forum moderator since
2011
•WordPress site designer/developer since 2008
•Professional web designer since 1998
14. Version Compatibility
0 people say it works. 23 people say it works. 2 people say it works.
0 people say it’s broken. 1 person say it’s broken. 14 person say it’s broken.
If IT WORKS votes / TOTAL votes >=
0.7
then IT WORKS
If IT WORKS votes / TOTAL votes >=
0.3
then IT’S BROKEN
26. Plugin Troubleshooting
When in doubt, deactivate all plugins
Is the problem still there?
NO YES
Reactivate one plugin at a time
27. Plugin Troubleshooting
When in doubt, deactivate all plugins
Is the problem still there? YES
• Search forums/Web for similar issue
• Post in forum/report issue to developer
• Look in source code
• Switch to default theme
• Replace plugin with an alternative
28. Proper Plugin Care and Feeding
Avoid editing others’ plugin code...
COULD THE CHANGES:
•Be moved outside the plugin folder?
•Be incorporated into the plugin?
•Be forked into a new plugin?
36. Share Your Faves
• Contact forms • Caching
• Analytics • Admin interface
• Anti-spam • Custom fields
• Mapping • Custom post types
• Slider/slideshow • Social sharing
• Gallery • Multilingual
37. KATHRYN PRESNER
@zoonini • zoonini.com
SLIDES:
www.slideshare.net/zoonini
CREDITS & RECOMMENDED READING
• “Overwhelmed” photo (cc) andres.thor
http://www.flickr.com/photos/andresthor/3963368371/
• Background patterns – COLOURlovers.com
• 6 Questions To Ask Before You Install A WordPress Plugin –
http://sixrevisions.com/wordpress/before-install-wordpress-plugin/
(flowchart used with permission)
• Functionality: Plugins vs Themes –
http://wp.tutsplus.com/articles/general/functionality-plugins-vs-themes/
Notas del editor
What is a plugin? Extra bit of code that performs a special function – whichcan be added (or “plugged in”) to your WordPress site. Keeps the core of WordPress light and lean, while adding extra functionality for sites that need it. Independent of theme.
Different ways to view plugins in the repository – by download frequency
Most recently added
Curated collection
If you’re searching for a plugin but don’t know how to word it, phrase your search in the form of a human question.Try variatons, i.e. WP instead of WP. Try Google. Always download from the official repository – usually most reliable source
Old plugins increase exposure to security vulnerabilities, their functionality may have been replaced by core WP
Requires – what version of WordPress is required to use the plugin. Some plugins won't run on older versions of WordPress. Downloads – the number of times a plugin has been downloaded can give a sense of a plugin's popularity. If a plugin has only been downloaded twice, you may be excited to be a pioneer and try it out – or you might not feel like having your site used as a guinea pig! Last updated – if the plugin hasn't been touched since 2009, for example, it's often not a good sign. Although, sometimes that's only because the older version continues to work fine, so there's no need for an update.
Creating an account at WordPress.org lets you do a bunch of cool stuff
Compatibility – the plugin's known compatibility with various versions of WordPress. Older plugins that haven't been updated are often not compatible with newer versions of WordPress, so be careful. There's also a handy compatibility tool, where you can check the plugin against different WordPress versions. You can add your vote into the mix to help others know which versions play nice together.
Star rating – WordPress users can rate plugins, so take a look the average rating to get a sense of how well-regarded a plugin is. 1617 ratings of 4.5 stars or more? Mr. Popular! Is the plugin author a professional? Do they work with WordPress for a living? Is it a hobby? How much experience do they have? Core contributor?
Changelog – another element to check is the frequency of plugin updates. A history of consistent updates is generally a good sign, as it usually means the developer is keeping the plugin in good working order and/or making improvements. Regular updates are better than sporadic ones.
Support threads resolved – this new feature tells you how many recent support-forum threads – with questions about the plugin – have been resolved. This gives you an idea of how active the community is around a given plugin, and how likely you may be to get a helpful response on the message boards, should you run into any trouble.
This feature has a bug in it currently, numbers not accurate
Ask the community, including the plugin developer
Subscribe to support thread
You can now subscribe to get an email whenever a commit is made to a plugin repository even if it isn’t yours – keep on top of any updates without having to log into to your WordPress admin area
Remember your favourites & share with others – you can go here to see some of mine
You install a plugin and something goes amiss. What could it be?
What if you can’t deactivate within the dashboard? Rename plugins folder temporarily via FTP from plugins to pluginsOLD or something else
unless you enjoy redoing your changes every time you update the plugin. ask yourself if your changes can be moved outside the plugin (i.e. CSS), or they’re something others would find useful, ask the developer if they would incorporate into next release, Consider forking the plugin (discuss w/developer first) at the very least, keep a backup of your changes so you can restore them.
Including some you’ve probably heard of, and some you might not
From Automattic. WordPress provides 13 widgets, many of which contain a form enabling us to customize each instance. Populating a sidebar with widgets can be rather time consuming especially if you have to tweak each widget’s settings. The Monster Widget consolidates all 13 core widgets into a single widget! The Monster Widget installs just like any other plugin and creates a widget that can be used just like any other widget.
Bringing some of the best features of WordPress.com to WordPress.org sites