Theming Form Elements with Sass
Dennis shows us how we can use Sass to make theming form elements to match visuals. Some cool ways to style form elements. It’s rather advanced, though. Source: Theming Form Elements with Sass
Dennis shows us how we can use Sass to make theming form elements to match visuals. Some cool ways to style form elements. It’s rather advanced, though. Source: Theming Form Elements with Sass
Using Sass’ ability to use mixins and functions James makes using a defensive CSS trick easy. Quantity Queries sounds fun. Wonder if someday can apply this. Source: Using Sass for “Quantity Queries”
For the last few months, I’ve been quietly building a mailing list for those who are interested in getting better at WordPress development. Tom offers premium content. Source: Get Better at WordPress Development | Tom McFarlin
Ultimately, you may find you want to create things yourself. So you ask: “How do I go about getting started with WordPress development? What do you really like about WordPress ? Source: Getting Started with WordPress Development | Tom McFarlin
If you’re anything like me, every time a new website builder or CMS is launched (at least a good one), a little part of you goes cold. Send the similar vibe. Specialize and focus, but keep learning and adapting. Source: Keeping Ahead of the Game in Your Web Career
I think everyone faces the developer’s dilemma if they’ve been working with WordPress for a while. So what do you choose? Efficiency or Expertise? Almost the same suggestion. Learn, but no need over learn. Source: The Developer’s Dilemma – Efficiency or Expertise?
The reactive speed of a user interface is always directly related to a positive user experience. Here’s how we sped up the start-up time of the WordPress Customizer. Digging on Layers WP code. Source: How to Speed up the WordPress Customizer | Layers
Part of being a pragmatic programmer is not necessarily becoming well-versed in every single thing that comes along. It’s knowing when to use something new. The above quote already explains things. Source: Being a Pragmatic Programmer in WordPress | Tom McFarlin
If you’re thinking about starting a blog using WordPress, ask not “what can WordPress do for me,” but ask “What can I do for WordPress?” And other things. Don’t be afraid to blog. Problem is, sometimes it’s not “afraid” but more like, slack of 😝 Source: Ask Not “What Can WordPress Do For Me?” | Tom […]
Getting started in WordPress isn’t as easy as some would have us believe, but in order to get better, knowing our level of developer maturity can help. Junior, Intermediate or Senior ? Source: WordPress and Developer Maturity | Tom McFarlin