Display Posts – Easy lists, grids, navigation, and more
Display Posts allows you easily list content from all across your website. Start by adding this shortcode in the content editor to display a list of your most recent posts: [display-posts] Filter by Category To only show posts within a certain category, use the category parameter: [display-posts category="news"] Display as Post Grid You can create a great looking, column-based grid of posts with a bit of styling. Here’s how! List Popular Posts You can highlight your popular content in multiple ways. If you want to feature the posts with the most comments, use: [display-posts orderby="comment_count"] You can also list most popular posts by social shares. Include thumbnails, excerpts, and more The display parameters let you control what information is displayed for each post. To include an image and summary, use: [display-posts include_excerpt="true" image_size="thumbnail"] You can use any image size added by WordPress (thumbnail, medium, medium_large, large) OR any custom image size added by your theme or other plugins. Sort the list however you like By default the listing will list the newest content first, but you can order by title, menu order, relevance, content type, metadata, and more. List upcoming events You can easily list upcoming events from any event calendar. Each plugin will require slightly different code. Here are tutorials for popular event calendar plugins. If your plugin is not listed here, submit a support request and I’ll add it! Tutorials Our tutorials cover common customization requests, and are updated often. Full Documentation Query parameters for customizing which posts are listed (filter by category, tag, date…) Display parameters determine how the posts appear (title, excerpt, image…) Template parts for Display Posts to perfectly match your theme’s post listings Output filter for complete control over how the listing looks on your site Filters for even more powerful customizations for developers Extensions Display Posts – Pagination – Allow results of Display Posts to be paginated Display Posts – Date View – Lets you break your content down by month or year. Display Posts – Alpha View – Display an alphabetical listing of your content, broken down by letter Display Posts – Transient Cache – Cache the output using transients Co-Authors Plus Addon – multiple authors on posts Columns Extension – display posts in columns DPS Exclude Sticky – exclude sticky posts unless specifically requested DPS Pinch Zoomer – adds support pinch zooming post images on mobile devices and mouse wheel zooming on desktops Display Posts Shortcode Remote – display posts from a remote WordPress site utilizing the WP REST API.
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Tabby Responsive Tabs
Adds a set of horizontal tabs which changes to an accordion on narrow viewports Tabs and accordion are created with jQuery Supports multiple sets of tabs on same page Uses semantic header and content markup Aria attributes and roles aid screen reader accessibility Tabs and content are accessible via keyboard The Tabby responsive tabs plugin is designed to be an easy and lightweight way to add responsive tabs to your content. Experienced developers should be able to easily customize how the tabs display on their site by replacing the built-in CSS rules with an edited version (see note below for more details of this). Optional Add-ons The Tabby responsive tabs customiser add-on adds a settings panel with several parameters to provide the easiest way to customise the display of your tabs without editing any code. You can use the default tabby styles or one of the included one-click presets as a starting point for customisation. It also enables you to easily add icons to your tab titles. The Tabby link to tab add-on provides a simple shortcode to create links to specific tabs which can appear anywhere on the same page as the tabgroup without the page reloading. The Tabby tab to URL link add-on enables you to set one or more of your tabs to act as a link to any URL. The Tabby load accordion closed add-on changes the default behaviour when the tabs are displayed as an accordion so that no accordion sections are open when the page initially loads. The Tabby reopen current tab on reload add-on enables the currently active tab to remain the active (open) tab after the page has been reloaded/refreshed. Usage: There are two shortcodes used to create the tab group: [tabby] and [tabbyending] both must be used as below to create a tab group. To start a new tab use a [tabby] shortcode, eg: [tabby title="tabname"] replace tabname with the name of your tab. Add the tab content after the shortcode. Add a [tabbyending] shortcode after the content of the last tab in a tabgroup. Example If you copy & paste this example into your own page instead of typing them, ensure that you delete any stray or tags that might have appeared. [tabby title="First Tab"] This is the content of the first tab. [tabby title="Second Tab"] This is the content of the second tab. This is the content of the second tab. [tabby title="Third Tab"] This is the content of the third tab. This is the content of the third tab. This is the content of the third tab. [tabbyending] note: To prevent stray paragraph tags being introduced by WordPress’s wpautop filter, ensure that there is a blank line above and below each tabby shortcode and the tabbyending shortcode. You can see the tabs on the demo page. You can add the shortcodes to a page made using the WordPress block editor by using WordPress’s shortcode block. If you want to change how the tabs and accordion display on your site, you have two options: Use the Tabby Responsive Tabs Customiser plugin which provides a very easy way to customise the display of your tabs without needing to edit any code. Copy the contents of the plugin’s stylesheet into your child theme or custom styles plugin and make the changes to that copy as required. If you do this you will also need to prevent the built-in styles from loading by going to the admin page at settings => tabby and unchecking the “Include the default tabby stylesheet” checkbox. Additional Shortcode attributes Open The first (leftmost) tab panel will be open by default in ‘tab view’ and in ‘accordion view’. If you want a specific tab other than the first tab to be open by default when the page first loads, you can add the parameter & value open=”yes” to the shortcode for that tab: [tabby title="My Tab" open="yes"] If you use the ‘open’ shortcode parameter in one of your tab shortcodes, ensure that you only add it to single tab as having more than one tab open within a tab group is not supported. Icon The markup required to show an icon alongside a tab title can be added by using the ‘icon’ attribute. Tabby responsive tabs does not add the icon files, you will also need to use a theme or plugin (such as the tabby responsive tabs customiser add-on) to add the icon files: [tabby title="My Tab" icon="cog"] This adds a pseudo element before the tab title with the classes “fa” and “fa-cog”. Other icon font sets can be used if you ensure the CSS rules target the classes added by the plugin. The Tabby Responsive Tabs Customiser plugin can be used to add the Font Awesome files required to display the icons in the tab titles. Class This allows a custom class to be added to each tab and tab content area. The class added to the tab will be the value of the class parameter and the class of the tab content area associated with that tab will be the class with the ‘-content’ suffix. Controlling which tab is open when linking to the page You can use a ‘target’ URL parameter in your link to set which tab will be open when the page initially loads. The value of this parameter is based on the tab title specified in the tabby shortcode which built the tab, but formatted with punctuation & special characters removed, accents removed, and with dashes replacing the spaces. If you want to link to a ‘contacts’ page with a tab titled ‘Phone Numbers’ open, the url you use to link to this page would look like: yoursite.com/contact/?target=phone-numbers If you want a tab with the title ’email addresses’ to be open, the url would look like: yoursite.com/contact/?target=email-addresses If you want a tab with the title ‘entrées’ to be open (with an acute accent over the second e), the url would look like: yoursite.com/contact/?target=entrees Using a target url parameter will override any open shortcode parameters used.