Forum Replies Created

Viewing 3 replies - 1 through 3 (of 3 total)
  • Thread Starter lowemo

    (@lowemo)

    That’s awesome, thank you very much. I love this editor, but it was eating my <aside> tags.

    And you’re right that normally it would be unusual to have multiple areas of a post marked as separate <article> elements. But it’s not actually incorrect. So I’m sure there will be some users who’ll be happy to find those available (and I may yet, too). And each <article> or <section> can have its own <header> and <footer> elements. These are also not necessarily about the header or footer of the page (at least not according to my understanding, though they’re clearly most commonly used in a template).

    I’m looking forward to being able to see my <asides> without going to the plain text editor. 🙂

    I like to read the negative reviews before trying a plugin… and as far as I can tell, the @georgejipa (the plugin author) really went above and beyond to investigate the issues related to this particular site. I’d hope that @tariq2008x would come back and change his rating. 😉

    I think I’ll be trying this plugin. It really does seem to provide a nice way to show a more attractive “maintenance mode” page than the default.

    Thread Starter lowemo

    (@lowemo)

    I guess I can’t edit the title of this “issue”, or I’d change it to say “Edit element modal”. The attribute field is what is really too small, but in order to accommodate a larger text area for attributes, the modal would (ideally) need to be much larger (and/or be reformatted to have the label above the field so that the attributes text area could span the width of the modal). Anyway, I did spend some time looking at the code, but wasn’t quite sure how to make the changes I’m suggesting. I’m hoping you agree with my feedback, though, and have a good idea for how to implement this. I really do like this plugin… it’s (almost) exactly what I was looking for.

Viewing 3 replies - 1 through 3 (of 3 total)