Wordpress - hardcoding subscribe2 (or any other plugin) widget into template - wordpress

I know how to hardcode categories, archives, etc into theme but for one of my projects i would have to hardcode some plugins widgets (especially subscribe2) and i'm not sure how to do this. I know i can add widgets via widgets menu in wp admin, but that's not what i'm trying to achieve, i'm trying to set it up permamently in theme for later reuse. How to do this? Especially with subscribe2?

You can add the widget via the normal means, and check the code on the site using View->Source.
Then, you need to edit the html template for the theme (depending on where you want the widget to appear - main entry, sidebar.html, etc) and add the code there directly.

Related

How to create such buttons with Wordpress?

I'm very new to WordPress (tbh, it's my first time working with it). And I need to make a website as my school project using CMS. Creating pages with templates is alright, but I have a lot of troubles with buttons. I found this website, and I can see it using WordPress. I need such buttons as on this page https://movie-chooser.co.ua/random-movie-2/ (they appear when you hover over the image). Is this a default option for buttons in WordPress? If not, is there a plugin for this or what is the way to add them on my images?
First Install Elementor plugin https://wordpress.org/plugins/elementor/
and go to page when you add button and open page with elementor
and do drag and drop any element like button, space, text editor etc.
You have several ways to achieve that:
Overwritting Wordpress CSS
Using a plugin
Create your own shortcode
1 - Overwriting Wordpress CSS
If you manage to display all the elements using wordpress template, and your only issue is to display buttons over the images, then it should only be a matter of CSS
2 - Using a plugin
The idea here is to find a plugin that help you to create/display the informations you need (maybe you'll need to add functionnality to basic post though custom fields or using a custom post type).
Once you find the right plugin, again if the plugin dosen't directly offert some settings on the design then you'll have to overwrite the plugin's CSS rules to display the elements as you want.
3 - Create your own shortcode
If you're new to Wordpress I wouldn't recommend this method as it is kind of advanced, unless you're comfortable with PHP/HTML/CSS (optionaly JS).
This is the more flexible solution as you can basically control anything, but it will require you to understand some core concepts of Wordpress like WP Query and how custom queries works.
The idea here is to create a shortcode.
THis shortcode refere to a custom made PHP function, in which you can create a custom request to fetch the informations you need to display from Wordpress database, and display it in an HTML structure that you decide.
THen angain, you'll just have to customize it though CSS.
Note : no need to create a whole plugin if you decide to create a shortcode, you can use the template functions.php file for that.

Display Woocommerce widgets on normal pages

Is it possible to display woocommerce widgets on pages that are not part of Woocommerce?
You can probably find a plugin to do this, but if you want to get your hands a little dirty you can do a bit of theme development work (you might want to do it as a child theme first though)
You can create a template page https://developer.wordpress.org/themes/template-files-section/page-template-files/
and then include a wigitised area on that page
https://codex.wordpress.org/Widgetizing_Themes

How to create a public custom WordPress widget

I want to create a widget for WordPress that anybody can use (for free) which contains some entertaining content (like a gadget for iGoogle in earlier times).
What I did not find out:
Can a (custom) widget be public/listed, so everybody using WordPress can see and use it?
Or do I need to create a plugin in order for other WordPress users to see and use it?
Since I want to let the users decide, where to put this additional content, how can I achieve this? (i.e. integrate this widget behaviour into a WordPress plugin?)
The basic idea is that we have some interesting content, we want to spread on WordPress for free.
It's up to you wether you want to create you widget through you theme (eg: via functions.php) or via a plugin. If you would like everyone to use it independently from a theme, then the best idea would be to do it through a plugin.
Here is a simple tutorial that explains the pieces of code you need to include either in your theme or in a new plugin to create a Widget accessible via the WordPress's widgets panel: http://www.wpbeginner.com/wp-tutorials/how-to-create-a-custom-wordpress-widget

Where to start in editing a wordpress plugin?

I am a newbie in wordpress and I was given the opportunity to edit a certain plugin which is MarketPress, but then I had hard times dealing with it since I'm new to this thing and I don't know where exactly to go, I would want to edit an included dynamic_sidebar but I can't the file on where to edit this. Please help me. :(
Thanks.
Not sure of your level of understanding so forgive me if this is over-simplistic.
The sidebar content is driven by widgets, which is controlled from the Widgets admin panel. The only thing about a sidebar that you should be able to edit by messing with its definition are the wrapping markup for the whole widget and for the title, along with the sidebars name and description. The last two only effect text that shows up in the admin Widgets panel.
However what I describe above is not found with the dynamic_sidebar() method, rather with the register_sidebar() or register_sidebars() methods. These 'define' the name and settings for a sidebar. The dynamic_sidebar() method is the used to implement the sidebar by passing it that sidebars name.
The sidebar is then populated with widgets via the admin Widgets panel.
Typically sidebars are registered from within the functions.php file of a theme, but if a plugin contains templates there no reason why it couldn't also have its own sidebars. As for where the register_sidebar() function is being used in your plugin specifically, I couldn't say. Just search through it using whatever IDE you like, or grep if your comfortable with it.
Hope this helps.

Modify wordpress site independently of theme

I am using a WordPress theme in a site. I want to edit the bottom of the page, replacing the WordPress default message and replace it with a custom message. The problem is, the change I want to make should be independent of the theme. I can change that editing footer.php using admin panel. Problem is, I do not want the changes to be reverted as soon as I change the theme. Can anyone suggest how to achieve that? Besides I want to remove the WordPress logo, too.
This isn't the way wordpress works I am afraid.
Anything that is tied to the database (posts, pages etc etc) will remain from theme to theme, but any changes you make to the theme files directly (editing default footer text) are tied to not just that theme, but those specific files. If you change the theme, or update the theme to a new version, your changes will be lost.
You are editing a file, and that file will no longer be in use when you switch theme.
You could use a plugin to create an overlay layer at the bottom of the page but this would be a fairly nasty solution and would be liable to appear differently when you change the theme.
Alternately, a plugin could be used to inject some javascript that modifies the footer but again, would depend on the theme as to what classes/IDs you'd be wanting to modify.
Basically this isn't something that's done!

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