Dashboard Widgets Suite
1 Plugin. 9 Widgets. Awesome Dashboard. Add new widgets to your WordPress Dashboard. Streamline your workflow and optimize productivity. Widgets Dashboard Widgets Suite provides awesome widgets that you can add to your Dashboard with a click: Control Panel – Control widgets directly from the Dashboard User Notes – Add, edit, delete notes for any user role Feed Box – Display and customize any RSS Feed Social Box – Display social links from Twitter, Facebook, etc. List Box – Display custom lists created via the Menu screen Widget Box – Display any theme or WP widget (e.g., Search, Text) System Info – Display basic or advanced system information Debug Log – Display, customize, reset your WP debug log PHP Error Log – Display, customize, reset your server error log Each widget includes its own set of options for customizing display 🙂 The notes widget is super awesome, designed for serious note takers. You can choose from 3 note formats: Text, HTML, or Code. Check out Installation for more about the User Notes Widget. Suggest a widget! Features Dashboard Widgets Suite provides a slick set of useful Dashboard widgets with some great features: Includes 9 awesome Dashboard widgets Easy to set up and customize options Regularly updated and “future proof” Secure, clean, error-free code Built with the WordPress API Lightweight, fast and flexible Focused on performance, loads only enabled widgets Enable/disable widgets via Dashboard or plugin settings Option to restore 1-column display for the Dashboard Shortcodes to display widgets on the frontend Many options for customizing widget display Works perfectly with or without Gutenberg Check out the Screenshots for more details. Suggest a feature! Privacy This plugin does not collect or store any user data. It does not set any cookies, and it does not connect to any third-party locations. Thus, this plugin does not affect user privacy in any way. Dashboard Widgets Suite is developed and maintained by Jeff Starr, 15-year WordPress developer and book author. Support development I develop and maintain this free plugin with love for the WordPress community. To show support, you can make a donation or purchase one of my books: The Tao of WordPress Digging into WordPress .htaccess made easy WordPress Themes In Depth Wizard’s SQL Recipes for WordPress And/or purchase one of my premium WordPress plugins: BBQ Pro – Blazing fast WordPress firewall Blackhole Pro – Automatically block bad bots Banhammer Pro – Monitor traffic and ban the bad guys GA Google Analytics Pro – Connect WordPress to Google Analytics Head Meta Pro – Ultimate Meta Tags for WordPress REST Pro Tools – Awesome tools for managing the WP REST API Simple Ajax Chat Pro – Unlimited chat rooms USP Pro – Unlimited front-end forms Links, tweets and likes also appreciated. Thank you! 🙂
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- awesome5×1.13%
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Query Monitor
Query Monitor is the developer tools panel for WordPress and WooCommerce. It enables debugging of database queries, PHP errors, hooks and actions, block editor blocks, enqueued scripts and stylesheets, HTTP API calls, and more. It includes some advanced features such as debugging of Ajax calls, REST API calls, user capability checks, and full support for block themes and full site editing. It includes the ability to narrow down much of its output by plugin or theme, allowing you to quickly determine poorly performing plugins, themes, or functions. Query Monitor focuses heavily on presenting its information in a useful manner, for example by showing aggregate database queries grouped by the plugins, themes, or functions that are responsible for them. It adds an admin toolbar menu showing an overview of the current page, with complete debugging information shown in panels once you select a menu item. Query Monitor supports versions of WordPress up to three years old, and PHP version 7.4 or higher. For complete information, please see the Query Monitor website. Here’s an overview of what’s shown for each page load: Database queries, including notifications for slow, duplicate, or erroneous queries. Allows filtering by query type (SELECT, UPDATE, DELETE, etc), responsible component (plugin, theme, WordPress core), and calling function, and provides separate aggregate views for each. The template filename, the complete template hierarchy, and names of all template parts that were loaded or not loaded (for block themes and classic themes). PHP errors presented nicely along with their responsible component and call stack, and a visible warning in the admin toolbar. Usage of “Doing it Wrong” or “Deprecated” functionality in the code on your site. Blocks and associated properties within post content and within full site editing (FSE). Matched rewrite rules, associated query strings, and query vars. Enqueued scripts and stylesheets, along with their dependencies, dependents, and alerts for broken dependencies. Language settings and loaded translation files (MO files and JSON files) for each text domain. HTTP API requests, with response code, responsible component, and time taken, with alerts for failed or erroneous requests. User capability checks, along with the result and any parameters passed to the capability check. Environment information, including detailed information about PHP, the database, WordPress, and the web server. The values of all WordPress conditional functions such as is_single(), is_home(), etc. Transients that were updated. Usage of switch_to_blog() and restore_current_blog() on Multisite installations. In addition: Whenever a redirect occurs, Query Monitor adds an HTTP header containing the call stack, so you can use your favourite HTTP inspector or browser developer tools to trace what triggered the redirect. The response from any jQuery-initiated Ajax request on the page will contain various debugging information in its headers. PHP errors also get output to the browser’s developer console. The response from an authenticated WordPress REST API request will contain an overview of performance information and PHP errors in its headers, as long as the authenticated user has permission to view Query Monitor’s output. An an enveloped REST API request will include even more debugging information in the qm property of the response. By default, Query Monitor’s output is only shown to Administrators on single-site installations, and Super Admins on Multisite installations. In addition to this, you can set an authentication cookie which allows you to view Query Monitor output when you’re not logged in (or if you’re logged in as a non-Administrator). See the Settings panel for details. Browser extension Query Monitor is also available as an optional browser dev tools extension. This is an alternative to using the in-page panel that gets output into the admin toolbar. Using the browser extension has some advantages over the in-page panel: The Query Monitor panel doesn’t take up space within the page you are inspecting The panel can be resized, undocked, and moved around like any other developer tools panel Information about the Query Monitor browser extension can be found here. Other Plugins I maintain several other plugins for developers. Check them out: User Switching provides instant switching between user accounts in WordPress. WP Crontrol lets you view and control what’s happening in the WP-Cron system Thanks The time that I spend maintaining this plugin and others is in part sponsored by: Automattic ServMask WP Staging All my kind sponsors on GitHub Privacy Statement Query Monitor is private by default and always will be. It does not persistently store any of the data that it collects. It does not send data to any third party, nor does it include any third party resources. Query Monitor’s full privacy statement can be found here. Accessibility Statement Query Monitor aims to be fully accessible to all of its users. Query Monitor’s full accessibility statement can be found here.