As part of my two month-long party celebrating the two year anniversary of WordPress.com and this blog with guest bloggers, we’re just finishing up month one of non-stop blogging about blogging, and tomorrow begins a whole month of non-stop WordPress tips.
To help get you in the mood, here are some of the tips for WordPress and WordPress.com I’ve covered in the past.
WordPress Help
The most important help I can give to WordPress users is knowing where to go for help. The resources for finding help for WordPress issues are:
- WordPress Support Forums: For problems and issues for dealing with the full version of WordPress.
- WordPress.com Forums: The support forum for issues dealing with WordPress.com.
- WordPress.com Support Contact: If you are unable to contact WordPress.com support through your blog’s Feedback form, you can contact WordPress.com Support via their contact form, open Monday – Friday 9 AM – 5PM PDT.
- WordPress.com FAQ: Frequently Asked Questions about WordPress.com features and tips.
- WordPress Codex: The online manual for WordPress Users, WordPress.com, and other versions of WordPress.
- WordPress Lessons: Tutorials and Lessons on how to use and customize WordPress.
- Reporting Bugs: Information on how to report bugs in WordPress.
- IRC Chat: An on and off again live chat channel for help with WordPress issues.
Some articles I’ve written in the past on how to find and get help with WordPress include:
- First Step to WordPress Help: Search First
- Getting Help With WordPress.com
- WordPress in Your Language
- Need Help? The WordPress.com FAQ
- A Guide to the WordPress Code, The Online Manual for WordPress Users
- One Year Anniversary Review: Helping WordPress.com Users
- Need WordPress.com Help – Ask Nicely
- One Year Anniversary Review: WordPress For Beginners
- WordPress Help in Your Language
- Looking for WordPress Support and Help: Ask the Right Questions
- Blogging Pro – The Place to Go for WordPress and Blogging News
- New WordPress.com Forums
- Instantly Translate Your Blog
- Blogging in More Than One Language
- Don’t Buy WordPress – It’s Free
- New WordPress Security Releases
- One Year Anniversary Review: In the Beginning WordPress Begot WordPressMU Begot WordPress.com
- Getting Started With WordPress
- Give the Gift of Love to WordPress
- The Wonderful World of WordPress Products
- What I Needed to Learn About WordPress
- Why I Choose WordPress as My CMS
- ZePrez WordPress Video Guides
- Volunteering on the WordPress Codex
- WordPress.com Resources for Beginners (and video, too)
WordPress.com Tips and Tricks
For two years, I’ve been a fellow WordPress.com blogger, learning how to work within the limitations of the free blogging services. Here are some tips on how to use WordPress.com.
- What Do I Do With My New WordPress.com Blog
- Naming Your WordPress.com Blog
- A Tagging Bookmarklet for WordPress and WordPress.com Users
- Customize Your WordPress.com Blog’s Look and Theme
- WordPress.com Custom CSS – All The Styles for the Sandbox Theme
- Backing Up Your WordPress.com Blog
- Playing with WordPress.com New Sidebar Widgets
- Customizing RSS Feed Links for WordPress.com and WordPress Sidebar Widgets
- Instructions on Uploading a Photograph on WordPress.com
- WordPress.com Resources for Beginners (and video, too)
- Nadgouda’s Iface Thoughts Moving to Full Version WordPress
- Ethan Zuckerman: Blog Anonymously with WordPress.com
- Which WordPress Plugins Does Lorelle on WordPress Use?
- Get Your WordPress.com Blog Now Verified by Google’s Webmaster Tools
WordPress.com Blog Bling
WordPress.com blogs are limited to what can be done within the post content area, the only really “customizable” area users have access to. I popular series, called WordPress.com Blog Bling, was a challenge to myself and others to push WordPress.com’s post content area to its creative limits. It covered fonts, lists, blockquotes, images, video, lines, smilies, podcasts, writing code in your posts, adding a signature, and how to ad other graphic and visual design elements.
- WordPress.com Blog Bling
- WordPress.com Blog Bling: Decorating Your WordPress.com Blog
- WordPress.com Blog Bling: Lines and Smilies
- WordPress.com Blog Bling: Fun Font Bling
- WordPress.com Blog Bling: Blockquotes and Quotes
- WordPress.com Blog Bling: Blogroll and Sidebar Bling
- WordPress.com Blog Bling: Signatures and Writing Code
- Adding Video and Podcasting Bling to Your WordPress.com Blogs
- WordPress.com Blog Bling: Show Off Your Blog Bling
WordPress Tips
I love the full version of WordPress and have several WordPress blogs that I’ve dug into, fully customized and tweaked – and broke – too many times to mention. Here are some tips for full version WordPress blogs I’ve written over the past two years on this blog.
Installation and Upgrading WordPress
- Good Reasons to Upgrade WordPress
- Upgrading WordPress with SSH Commands
- Blogging Pro’s Installing WordPress Steps
- Nadgouda’s Iface Thoughts Moving to Full Version WordPress
- Nadgouda’s IFace – WordPress: The Goods and The Bads
- Battle: Permalinks Versus Folder Links
WordPress Administration and Publishing Tips
- Why I Choose WordPress as My CMS
- What I Needed to Learn About WordPress
- One Year Anniversary Review: WordPress For Beginners
- Spring Cleaning or Fall Brush Off – Season Blog Cleaning
- Using Javascript in WordPress
- The Perfect WordPress Dashboard
- Customizing WordPress Administration Panels
- A Day in the Life of a Paranoid Website Administrator
- Backing Up WordPress
- My Daily Tasks With WordPress
- A New Kind of 404 Page Not Found Result
- Site Optimization: Checking Loose Links
- Benefits of WordPress: Choosing What You Turn On and Turn Off
- Those Pesky 404 Page Not Found Errors
- Make Blogging with WordPress Part of Your Daily Routine
- Portals, Splash Pages, Guest Books, Midi Songs, Traffic Counters, and Other Web Duds
- Search and Replace in WordPress MySQL Database
- Blog Maintenance – Check For 404 Page Not Found Errors
- Housekeeping: Cleaning Out Post Drafts
- Getting Under the Skin of the .htaccess File
- Creating a “Bad Code Day” Error Message for Your Blog
- Archives Pages Tip from Photomatt
- Customizing Your WordPress Quicktag Buttons
- WordPress Administration Panel Confusion – Changing the wpadmin.css
- Changing Titles in the Titles of WordPress Posts
- Change the Post Title – Also Change the Post Slug
- Tags and Tagging in WordPress
- When the Blog Breaks: Fixing Your Broken Blog
- When The Blog Breaks: Site Monitoring
- One Year Anniversary Review: Blog Housekeeping and Maintenance
- Sort Posts By Category Now Available in WordPress
- Lean, Mean, and Clean WordPress Write Post Panel
- Annual Reminder (and some options) to Backup Your WordPress Blog
- Revitalizing Your Blog’s Past Posts
- Integrating FeedBlitz Feed Email Service Into WordPress
- Strange Referrer Links in WordPress.com Stats
WordPress Publishing Tips
- Adding a Signature To Personalize Your Blog Post
- Working Ahead – Future Posts with WordPress
- WordPress Pages: Exploring the Pseudo-Static Pages of WordPress
- Technical Tips for Publishing a Series of Articles on Your Blog
- Changing Titles in the Titles of WordPress Posts
- Taking Notes in WordPress
- WordPress Power User Features – Just Press It
- Bring WordPress Press It Window to the Front of the Class
- Technical Tips for Publishing a Series of Articles on Your Blog
- Adding Del.icio.us, Digg, Technorati and Slashdot Links to Your WordPress Blog
- Social Bookmarking Submit Links on WordPress Blogs
- Adding Post to Spurl Button on Your WordPress Posts
- Defining Abbreviations, Acronyms and Definitions in Your Blog
- Adding Video to Your WordPress Blog
- Hosting Your Own Flash Player and Movies on Your WordPress Blog
- Writing with Single Lines Not Double in Your Blog Posts
- WordPress Thumbnail Size Limit Hack
- Blogging in More Than One Language
- Creating Effective, Attention-Getting Headlines and Titles
- One Year Anniversary Review: The Power of the Link
- How to Impress with WordPress
- Taking Notes in WordPress
- WordPress Power User Features – Just Press It
- I FOUND YOU – ONLINE SPELL CHECKER!
WordPress Themes Tips
WordPress Themes offer quick and easy application of “pretty” to your blog, but they are so much more.
The hardest part of WordPress Themes is finding one that suits your blog and blogging style, then tweaking it to fine-tune the Theme for your blog. Here are some tips:
Finding WordPress Themes
- Help Me Find a WordPress Theme
- Looking for Lists of WordPress Themes?
- New WordPress 2.1 Theme Compatibility List
- Review of Best Minimalist WordPress Themes
Choosing a WordPress Theme
Choosing a WordPress Theme isn’t just about the “pretty”. A WordPress Theme is a dynamic creature, with the potential for every page on a WordPress blog to look and feel different. The most simple WordPress Themes have a “look” for the front page, single post page view, and the category and other multi-post page views at a minimum. More complex Themes change depending upon the request the visitor makes on the blog. It opens up a wide range of possibilities, and makes finding the right WordPress Theme for your blog a little more difficult.
- Choosing a WordPress Theme
- How Do You Choose a WordPress Theme?
- WordPress Theme Easy Remodeling: Does She or Doesn’t She?
- One Year Anniversary Review: Choosing a WordPress Theme
- Are You Risking Your Blog With an Unofficial or Vulnerable WordPress Theme?
Designing a WordPress Theme
- Designing a WordPress Theme – Building a Sandbox
- Designing a WordPress Theme From Scratch
- The Secret of Successful Editing of WordPress Themes
- WordPress.com Custom CSS – All The Styles for the Sandbox Theme
- WordPress Tips and Tricks for Style Sheets
- CSS: Studying Your CSS Styles
- Finding Your CSS Styles in WordPress
- Free Text Only Editors for Templates, PHP, HTML, CSS, and More
- Creating Multiple Single Posts for Different Categories
- Breaking the Limits of Customizable WordPress Themes
- Designing a Theme to Include WordPress Widgets?
- One Year Anniversary Review: Designing WordPress Themes
- Cybercafe Experiments: How to Convert Any Web Template Into a WordPress Theme
- 10 Steps to Valid HTML
- WordPress Tips and Tricks for Template Files
- Navigating Your WordPress Site
- WordPress Design Details
- WordPress Template Files and Style Sheets – Give Them a Name
- My WordPress Theme is Broken
- Problem Solving the WordPress Header
- More Website Design Mistakes
- Using Author Template Tags Outside of the WordPress Loop
- Alex King: WordPress Themes Versus Templates
- Conquering Site Validation Errors
- Showing Dates Not Just Times in Your Multi-Post Views
Designing WordPress Themes for Public Release
A WordPress Theme you design for yourself meets your needs and is as good a Theme as you are a designer. A WordPress Theme released for others to use has to be more. It has to be checked, tested, and rechecked so it will work within all circumstances and situations. It has to be safe from security vulnerabilities and flaws. It must be supported, and it must be updated as web technology and WordPress changes.
Here are some tips specifically for those who want to release their WordPress Themes to the public:
- Attention WordPress Theme Designers: Designing Themes for WordPressMU
- WordPress Theme Designers: Slapping You Upside the Head
- Designing Themes for WordPressMU – Fill In All The Details
- Are You Risking Your Blog With an Unofficial or Vulnerable WordPress Theme?
- WordPress Themes – Do You Want Someone Messing Around With Your Theme?
WordPress Theme and Template Files Tips
- The Secret of Successful Editing of WordPress Themes
- Future of Header Art in WordPress 1.6?
- My WordPress Theme is Broken
- Show Just One Category in WordPress Categories
- Using Javascript in WordPress
- Putting the Description Back Into Your WordPress Head
- Problem Solving the WordPress Header
- Separating Comments and Trackbacks in WordPress – The Answer
- Creating a Good Blog Archive
- Code Snippets – Help and Cheating and Goodness
- Secrets of WordPress Theming
- Understanding and Fixing WordPress Search
- InfoRapid Multiple Files Search and Replace Across Multiple Files
- Comment Live Preview Placement
- How to Put Javascript in External Files
- Using Author Template Tags Outside of the WordPress Loop
- Editing the Edit This WordPress Template Tag
- Dissecting the WordPress Post Title Link
- WordPress Category Feed Links in Your Post Meta Data Section
- Display Post Excerpts Only in WordPress
- One Year Anniversary Review: WordPress Tips, Tricks and Techniques
- Creating Effective, Attention-Getting Headlines and Titles
- Devlounge Offers Customizing WordPress Tips
- Content Negotiation Techniques with WordPress
- Integrating Google Gadgets Into WordPress Themes
- The Battle Between Image Width and Column Width
- Abhijit Nadgouda’s List of WordPress Global Variables
- The Number One Flaw in WordPress: Comments
- WordPress 2.1: Template Tag and Function Changes
- Social Bookmarking Submit Links on WordPress Blogs
- Don’t Get Rid of Your Home Link: How to Add a Home Link
- Duplicate Content Controlled Naturally Through Themes
Custom and Advanced WordPress Techniques
- How to Create Your Corporate Intranet Using WordPress
- Embedding WordPress Into OS Commerce
- Websites Pushing WordPress Beyond Its Limits
- The Future of WordPress Comments with Ajax: Comments Attached to Content
- BlogHelper: Integrating a Forum Into WordPress
- Using WordPress to Publish a Magazine or News Site
WordPress and SEO Tips
- Do-It-Yourself Search Engine Optimization Guide
- WordPress and SEO Tips and Techniques
- Duplicate Content Controlled Naturally Through Themes
- Submitting Your Sitemap and Feeds to Google Blog Search and Site Submission
Feeds
- Understanding, Using, and Customizing WordPress Blog Feeds
- WordPress Plugins for Feeds
- Adding RSS Feeds to WordPress
- Customizing Your Feed Titles
- Feeding on Lorelle on WordPress
- Customizing RSS Feed Links for WordPress.com and WordPress Sidebar Widgets
- Integrating FeedBlitz Feed Email Service Into WordPress
WordPress Widgets
- WordPress.com Widgets – Customizing Your WordPress.com Theme Sidebar
- Playing with WordPress.com New Sidebar Widgets
- Which WordPress Widgets Would You Want?
- Customizing RSS Feed Links for WordPress.com and WordPress Sidebar Widgets
- WordPress Sidebar Widgets Goes Full Version WordPress Plugin
- Designing a Theme to Include WordPress Widgets?
- WP-Quotes Random Quote Generator WordPress Plugin Now a Widget
- 2007 Year of the Widget
- WordPress Widgets: The Next Generation of WordPress Plugins
WordPress Plugins
I love WordPress Plugins, and their creative authors. What they bring to the WordPress table is the ability for our blogs to go beyond just the basics – they allow us to customize and tweak them infinitely.
I’ve written a lot about various WordPress Plugins, but here are some tips for installing and using WordPress Plugins.
- How to Install, Configure, and Use WordPress Plugins
- WordPress Plugins Series
- Where to Find WordPress Plugins
- Lists of Your Favorite WordPress Plugins
- How to Write a Simple WordPress Plugin
- Video How To – Writing Your First WordPress Plugin
- A Love Letter to WordPress Plugin Authors
- WordPress Pluggable Functions and Plugins by Nadgouda
- WordPress Hooks – All of Them
A Month of WordPress Tips
This seems like a lot of WordPress tips, leaving nothing left for the next month, but trust me, I have a long list of WordPress tips to bring to you, and I know my guest bloggers have even more.
That’s the joy of WordPress. It is infinitely flexible, customizable, and tweakable. What you do with it is up to your imagination and ability. Hopefully, with all these great WordPress tips, your abilities will improve and your imagination will be stimulated with the possibilities.
Enjoy!
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Copyright Lorelle VanFossen, member of the 9Rules Network, and author of Blogging Tips, What Bloggers Won't Tell You About Blogging.
19 Comments
Whoa! It almost seems useless to do a “wordpress” month after all those links.
Actually, when I look at the list, I see that I haven’t covered WordPress Tips as extensively as I thought I had. There are SO many tips I wanted to cover, and now this whole month gives me and others the chance to tackle my favorite subject. 😀
Thanks for the colossal collection! Great idea and example of a round up publishing format to work towards. This list widens the scope of what WordPress can do – amazing. Looking forward to the series.
Still, I can see what Carl means. With all of these, one would think that the only tips that haven’t been covered are the monetary kind that you drop in a Tip Jar. 😉
Seriously, Lorelle, by the time I finish reading all your previous articles highlighted above, and finally sit down with my own tips, September would be gone!! LOL.
Geesh, you guys. Tips are like breath mints. You only use them when you need them. You don’t go through the whole list like a book.
You all are too funny. 😀
Lorelle, Lorelle, Lorelle.. you know why I don’t visit your blog so often? because I know I’ll be sucked in and I’ll have to spend hours exploring this information treasure chest.
*settles down for a whole night of reading*
Thanks for all these links and for your two years of wordpress tips.
Ah, Mohsin, I’m so glad I’m better than sleeping pills. 😀
And thanks, Chess and everyone, for being the most important part of my anniversary party! Without you all, those of us standing around in party hats would sure look stupid. 😀
Hi Lorelle,
I am very glad you, your tips and your guest authors have been around for the past two years. Although I haven’t left a comment recently, I’ve always found you and yours one of the very first sources of WordPress info that I turn to when I hit a snag, when someone else hits a snag or needs info and just for great reading.
Many thanks for all your work. perhaps someday I can make it to an SOB convention and thank you personally.
Enjoy the day.
Thanks for the kind words. As for meeting up with me, I attend and speak at a lot of conferences besides SOBCon. Were you at WordCamp? 😀
Happy anniversary (and hanukah when it comes :))
I am fairly new to wordpress, and am struggling with some of the plugins. Can you provide some explanations on how to make adsense deluxe work, and amazon? also ultimate tag warrior. generally their pages either assume the user is already expert, or are written in jargon….
These Plugins come with fairly good documentation, but you can learn more on installing them from How to Install, Configure, and Use WordPress Plugins. The Ultimate Tag Warrior Plugin does not work for current versions of WordPress and has stopped being updated as the next version of WordPress will include tags built-in.
Many Many Thanks! It’s like an encyclopedia.
Is this updated for the new WordPress Dashboard?
@ Brian:
Is what updated? The articles referenced? This was published and many of the articles written during the month celebrating the two year anniversary of WordPress and this blog in August of 2007. WordPress 2.5 was released at the end of March 2008. Do they still apply. Yes. For the most part they do. The changes to the WordPress Administration Panels (the Dashboard is just one of those panels not the whole thing) were mostly cosmetic.
But if there is a specific article you are concerned about, let me know or try it and see if it works for you in the new version.
I was thinking along the lines of the Media Library, the uploading of photos and the like. Little things would be page slugs, adding tags and changing and editing widgets. All those have changed from the old dashboard.
@ Brian:
The Media Library is new, but also new cosmetically. It still works much the same as the old version, just more visual. I do like the easier ability to add CSS align classes, though the linking aspect has confused many, as it did in the old version. The gallery feature is fun, and I’ll have more on that soon.
Tags are tags, whether or not they came with Plugins or the native tagging in WordPress. They don’t change. The ability of automatic redirects with post slugs is nice, but the same as it just skips the redirect codes in the .htaccess file. So most of the tips within this month long article series, as with all the articles on my blog, continue to be fairly up-to-date, and I’ve written a lot about the new version as well.
Articles that are drastically changed by the new version that I’ve written I’m slowly going back and adding notes and updating them, and I’m constantly adding new documentation and information here and on the WordPress Codex. Living and working with an evolving program is just part of life. Things change, but the old stuff is still valid. 😀
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