Graphic Design Tips Online - November 2014 Best Wordpress Plugins
Graphic Design Tips Online - November 2014 Best Wordpress Plugins
Now that Halloween season is ending, it’s time to think about what really matters. I’m talking about WordPress plugins; though family, friends and two-to-three months of holiday cheer ain’t bad either. As usual, we have an eclectic assortment for you to check out November 2014 Best Wordpress Plugins.
Suppamenu
Let’s say you’ve bought a theme you really like, but you find out that it doesn’t support dropdowns. If you really need them, Suppamenu is a great way to get them.
The plugin integrates with WordPress’ default menu system to provide an
impressive array of customization options. Themes, jQuery animations,
custom themes, menu icons… and the whole thing is responsive.
Don’t
let the fact that there is also a pro version put you off. All that
does is add more skins, animations, and menu types. The free plugin is
in no way crippled or watermarked.
Here is the list of November 2014 Best Wordpress Plugins
WP Options Editor
Note: Don’t install WP Option Editor unless you know exactly
what you’re doing. Basically, it allows you to edit all of WordPress’
options in one place, the way you might directly in the database.
This
means you have all kinds of control, but you could also potentially
break your WordPress install. It’s a powerful tool, and not to be used
lightly.
cPanel E-Mail Manager
If your host has cPanel, you can use cPanel E-mail Manager
to connect your WordPress install to your server’s web mail. No, that
doesn’t mean you can read your e-mail from WordPress, but you can create
and manage the web mail accounts for each user.
The free version
of cPanel E-Mail Manager is somewhat limited, though still perfectly
useful: All e-mail account management must be done manually; if you want
to automatically add a new e-mail address for each new user,
automatically notify them via their primary e-mail, or manage mailing
lists, you’ll need to upgrade.
ElasticPress
ElasticPress
isn’t a plug ‘n’ play solution, but it’s quite powerful, and probably
worth the effort for good site search. It’s designed to replace the
default WordPress search function by integrating with a third-party API.
According to its creators, ElasticPress offers the following upgrades over the regular search engine, and a few more besides:
- Relevant results
- Autosuggest
- Fuzzy matching (catch misspellings as well as ‘close’ queries)
- Proximity and geographic queries
- Search metadata
- Search taxonomies
- Facets
- Search all sites on a multisite install
Sadly, I don’t have a big site full of content to test it on right now, but it looks promising.
Slash Edit
URL hackers rejoice! Slash Edit
allows you to get from the front-end of your site to a post or page
editing screen that much faster. If you’re browsing through your site,
and you see something you’d like to change (maybe you made a typo), just
add “/edit” to the end of the URL.
That’s it. Just keep in mind that pretty permalinks have to be active to make it all work.
Bamboo Migration
A
lot of us find ourselves migrating WordPress databases in the course of
our work. We move existing sites to new domains, and take test sites
live on a regular basis. We find ourselves generating new SQL files,
editing databases manually, and going through the content to make sure
all image URLs are correct.
While other plugins can help you change the domain names after the fact, Bamboo Migration removes two or three steps by simply generating an SQL file, ready for import, with the new domain name already in place.
Just
install it, go to “Tools > Bamboo Migration”, pick your domain name,
and download the SQL file. Done. You’ll still have to import it the old
fashioned way (usually with PHPMyAdmin), but that’s life.
Nested Pages
I’ve
previously mentioned a plugin that allows you to order pages by
dragging and dropping them. The cool thing about writing a monthly
article is that when a much, much better plugin with the same purpose
comes along, I can tell you about it.
Nested Pages
is that much, much better plugin. It integrates with the existing page
management screen, allows for drag ‘n’ drop sorting, of course, all the
while preserving Quick Edit functionality. Install and go.
WP Auto Dealer
This
is a drop-in solution for car sellers who want to display their
available cars on their website. Like many other plugins of its kind, it
uses a custom post type with custom fields. These fields include
multiple image uploads, pricing information, make, model, color,
transmission, and other relevant details.
Also included is a
custom search engine that searches the metadata along with the title and
content, allowing people to find the right car faster.
The
default implementation is simple enough. Drop a shortcode into a page
and go. Developers who want further customization can have exactly that.
It’s a custom post type, after all.
Postmatic
Postmatic
encourages community engagement by allowing users to subscribe to
individual comment feeds, and better yet, reply to comments via e-mail.
Said replies get posted as regular comments on your site.
Mind
you, this plugin is part of a third-party service, which currently has a
waiting list for API keys. There may be a paid version of the
subscription in time (I’m guessing); but for now, all outgoing e-mails
just have a “Delivered by Postmatic” link at the bottom of each e-mail.
(This link can be removed with the donation of 1 USD (Yup. 1.) to a
number of charities via the Postmatic dashboard.)
Graphic Design Tips Online - November 2014 Best Wordpress Plugins
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