A post with every tag used

Posted by Bryan on January 23, 2010 under Featured Articles, Theme Help | Comments are off for this article

I wanted to make a page which outlined have every tagged used in WordPress would look within the Ministry Theme.

This is the H1 tag

This is the H2 tag

This is the H3 tag

This is the H4 tag

This is the H5 tag
This is the H6 tag

This is bold

This is strike through
This is italics
This is a link to nowhere

This is a quote

  • Un-ordered list
  • Another item
  • Last One
  1. Ordered list
  2. Another item
  3. Last One

Plugin & Sidebar Suggestions

Posted by Bryan on September 24, 2008 under Theme Help | 2 Comments to Read

The tabbed areas at the top of the sidebar can be used for a variety of things. Communicate to different audiences (as shown in the first box) or consolidate basic information (as shown in the second box). The third box on this demo outpus a list based on the WPListCal plugin.

Please know in advance that the tabbed area doesn’t work very well in IE6, but it does degrade. The tabs turn into h2 headings. The drawback is you lose the white background and it stretches the sidebar further down the page. We’re following in the path of 37 Signals in not spending hours and hours of time trying to fix every little detail for IE6. We want IE6 users to be able to read the content, but we’re not concerned with every visual effect going well. It’s time we grew beyond the old and busted browser.

You could also add an email subscription form using code generated by FeedBurner or FeedBlitz or another email and feed list manager.

You could also show recent photos as clickable thumbnails using Flickr and the Flickr plugin from Tan Tan Noodles.

Images Galore!

Posted by Bryan on under Theme Help | Comments are off for this article

Our ChurchThis is just a post to show you what some images will look like in your finished site when you add them using WordPress’ cool built-in image uploading functionality. The first one, at the top, is an image that “floats” to the right with the text wrapping around it.

You can change the default image sizes under the Settings > Miscelleneous area of the WordPress Admin area and there are plugins available to refresh all images on your site should you ever change these settings. Just remember that images are sized by WordPress as you upload them, so if you change your mind on the size later, you’ll need to change your code by re-uploading and re-inserting the image.

Just above is an image that’s aligned to the center using the “Add media” tool, and after the next paragraph are some images as thumbnails aligned to the left, but not using the “Left” alignment in the “Add Media” window, but rather with “none” selected next to alignment. Left alignment works similarly, but allows text to wrap around the image, which is fine unless the image is at the end of the article, in which case they will hang off the bottom of the article area.

One hint about WordPress (at least 2.6.*) is that the system automatically uses captions if you fill in the Caption field. We leave that blank. Then, we switch over to HTML view and add in a description of the image where the code says alt=”", between the quotation marks. This “alt” text serves at least 2 functions. One, it shows up if your image cannot be displayed, so at least people know what kind of image was supposed to be there. And second, search engines can’t admire your pictures, but they can catalog what’s in the picture using this “alt” text.

Site based on the Ministry Theme by Resnodesigns.