Working & WordPress-ing: Tutorials for WordPress Bloggers

How to hide selected posts in your front page

If you have a self-hosted WordPress site with a blog-type theme ~ the one which displays your posts in the frontpage in column and by date formats (like this site) ~ the easiest way to hide in your frontpage posts under certain categories is to use “category excluder” plugins.

(The image on this post uses a Newspaper layout which already has functions to select (and exclude) categories to show on the front page. The theme used by The Filipino Australian no longer requires category excluders as discussed on this post.)

Some of these plugins also have the functionality of excluding or hiding posts not only from your frontpage but also in archives and search pages. Some even allow you to exclude selected posts under certain tags, and even from your feeds.

Enter “categories exclude” or similar terms when you perform a search of these plugins in your “Install Plugins” window and you will be presented with a list of these plugins.

We have tested some of the plugins available in WordPress.org and below are four of the plugins which we like best as they are very functional and robust, and they produce the results we wanted. Note that, strictly speaking, plugins 3 and 4 are not “category excluder”, but I included them here as I found them also quite interesting.

1. Simply Exclude by Paul Menard

The plugin provides an interface to selectively exclude/include categories, tags, authors and pages from the 4 actions used by WordPress in your blog’s front page, archives, feeds, and search page. It can also be used to hide posts under certain tags.

2. Ultimate Category Excluder by Planet Mike

Ultimate Category Excluder excludes/hides posts under certain categories from your front page, archives, and feeds. Like Simply Exclude, it comes with an admin panel where you can toggle off/on categories to be excluded.

3. Category Selection Widget by Zack Design

Strictly, not a category excluder plugin but this plugin is excellent, especially for websites with multiple categories and sub-categories selection on their front page or on the sidebar. It gives additional functionality to your blog’s native WordPress “search engine” by giving you the ability to provide your users with multiple dropdowns. Very useful for blogs with lots of posts and sub-categories like websites of real estate agents where selection of posts can be based on subcategories like price range, location, number of bedrooms, etc.

4. Collapsing Categories by Robert Felty

Collapsing Categories creates an expandable list of categories and subcategories. It can also expand to show posts.

You can see a demo of this plugin on our sidebar TOPICS / POSTS.

In case you’re wondering: I am not promoting the plugins based on affiliate program-related considerations. I just wanted to share with you the results of my tests. The links above are affiliate links-free which you can easily find out by simply hovering your mouse on the links to see if they contain affiliate ids.

Working and WordPress-ing at WordPress.com revisited

I finally found the time to revisit “Working and WordPress-ing” at WordPress.com. Below is my latest post:

It has been more than a year since I made my last post on this site. At the request of some dear friends, I thought I give the control panel of my site at WordPress.com another look to see if I can continue with my experiments.

I am quite pleased to find a number of niceties and functionalities.

1. On new themes: I counted five pages of 30 theme thumbnails per page. I am not sure if there are 150 themes in there as some of thumbnails keep repeating, but anyway, I found some beautiful themes and some, premium themes too (meaning, you need to pay to use the theme).

For a change, I decided to use Greyzed, a dark and grungy theme with drop-down menus and a widgetized footer.

2. In the editing page, there is now a “Writing Helper” which allows you to use an existing post as a template and Request Feedback for getting feedback on your draft before publishing. (It’s good that the Share A Draft plugin for self-hosted blogs had been ported to WordPress.com.)

3. Also under Appearance panel, there is “iPad” which when activated displays “a beautiful app-like experience to visitors browsing with an iPad.

4. Under Appearance, there is also this “Extras” which you can switch on or off by simply clicking on “Update Extras” for your selected option. If activated, your blog will be displayed with a mobile theme when viewed with a mobile browser.

Obviously, this is an alternate to “iPad” for viewers who do not use an iPad like me.

5. Under Settings, there is “Webhooks” which I passed over as I am not into “hooks” yet. (Perhaps, later.)

6. Under Widgets, I found a number of new apps. Depending on which theme you use, you can put these widgets to enhance the appearance and functionality of your blog. From memory, these are the new widgets: Facebook Like box, Flickr (or has this been there since last year?), Twitter (I am sure this was not there before because I even posted “How to twitter your WP.com post”), Vodpod videos, del.icio.us, and Authors for multi-author site, obviously.

These are my impressions. It would be great if you can share your impressions or your experience with these new apps and functionalities.

For more WP.com tutorials, select any of the articles listed on the right panel or click here.

How to post by email – continued (Part 2)

We are resending the same image as in earlier post, this time with different settings.

How to post by email – continued… (A quick assessment)

Earlier post was not successful. The image on the full post is displaying on the top right panel reserved for Thesis multimedia box. I don’t expect a thumbnail to appear as well in the subsequent teaser.

Most likely, the theme is not using “image” as a custom field but another name like “post image.” Anyway, we will just adjust Postie’s setting to include the image code in the content.

Confession of a “Postie” user

When doing my experimental WP-hosted blogs, it was a delight using the plugin built into WordPress.com which allows me to update my blogs using emails.

I found the WP plugin very handy, in fact a necessity, considering that most of the time, I am on the road.

I tried using that to my self-hosted WP installs, but to no avail. The problems I had encountered were just too many to list down.

So I’ve been updating my blogs from my desktop that is when I have the time. Last month I tried again.

After upgrading my WP installs to version three dot oh and my server’s PHP build to version five plus, I installed “Postie.”

I’m still tweaking it, but I believe I have found the perfect solution (so far) to my blogs updating needs.

With “postie”, I can now update some of my blogs sending emails via a smart phone. I have even ventured to experiment sending updates to a “photoblog” site which for awhile had been done in updating accounts with social networking sites.

Visit my experimental photo site and see how “postie” works – http://inphotos.info/streetgallery

*** Let me know if you need help with your “postie.” I may be able to share with you a trick or two.

By the way, this update is sent via an email. :-) )

Romy

This is a test message posting with a photo

Still on the Postie WP plugin: Testing the plugin option where the image is uploaded not in post but as a URL. Forwarded earlier email.

Results:

1. The image was successfully uploaded, but the image is displayed on the right panel // If you don’t see the photo on the right panel, please click here. //This site is using the Thesis theme which allows images to be displayed on the right panel (if the Multimedia functionality is switched on). The placement of the uploaded may be different if using a different theme.

2. The message headers of the forwarded message was scrubbed and does not display in the post.

This is a test message posting with photo

Installed the Postie WordPress plugin today and experimenting on different options. Below photo is uploaded via email using a Blackberry where the image is sent as an attachment.

How to correctly show off your WP blog stats

When a WP blog shows off on its sidebar the following:

Blog Stats
• 3,000 visits

or worse,

Blog Stats
• 3,000 hits

without any additional information, I start asking: “What exactly does that mean?”

If a blog stats are presented in this fashion, the numbers look like a block of meaningless information.

Blog Stats widget dialog box

I know this may be hard to swallow, but that is the truth.

Let me just backtrack a little bit and elaborate before someone starts calling me names.

1. Currently, there is no method which can claim to produce web statistics with 100% accuracy. And the resulting numbers are dependent on what methodology is applied to generate those numbers. The fact that even Google has to explain the terms used in its analytics and how the Google numbers are calculated shows the difficulty in coming up with commonly accepted standards. You may wish to check out this page as an additional background.

2. Without being critical, WordPress.com in its Support page provided not enough information as to what the Blog Stats numbers are. Perhaps, to others the numbers need no explanation? Or perhaps there is another related Support page which I missed? I certainly don’t have the answer to that.

3. Again, without being critical, the same WordPress.com Support page says that we, the bloggers, can choose which word to use in describing the numbers. The two popular words, according to WP, are: “hits” (which is the default label in the Blog Stats widget dialog box), and “views”, the label “views” being more consistent with the label “Total Views”, used in the Blog Stats Dashboard | Summary Table.

4. The use of “hits” was okay, and even a buzzword, many many years ago. Is it still okay to use “hits” these days without defining what you mean by “hits”?

5. In technical terms, “hits” is not “visits” nor “views”. “Hits” are the number of files served when a web page (no distinction here between WP “post” and “page”) is requested from a server. A graphic, an icon, a banner and all sorts of files that make up a page are, technically, “hits”. For example, when you opened this page, the server’s log should have recorded at least 40 “hits” just on the bullets, icons and images alone displayed on this page.

Given this background, where does that leave us if we want to show off our WP blogs stats?

You may have other ideas, but right now I can think of only two things we can do to correctly show off our WP blog stats:

1. Stick to using “Views” to label those numbers. I will not use labels like “hits” or “visits” if I were you. In the absence of additional information from WP, these labels may be inaccurate information. You may be describing the numbers something that they are not. In the Blog Stats dashboard, the numbers are labeled “views”, remember?

2. Disclose the period covered by the stats. Again, the numbers are pretty much meaningless unless the period to which they relate is described. Here is an example to show how futile and frustrating it is to read blog stats crafted using the Blog Stats widget:

Blog Stats
• 3,000 views

If you are the owner of this blog and you know that your blog stats are for 12 months, no problem. You know what your stats stand for. But if you are a visitor of this blog and you don’t have that same information, what’s the first thing that comes to mind? What do these 3,000 views represent? Are these yesterday’s views? Or perhaps, last week’s? Or last month’s? Or, last 12 months’? And how do I compare the “popularity” of this blog with another blog with only 1,500 views but I know that this other blog has been online for only 2 months?

Any suggested wordings?

By the way, I am not fond of showing off my site’s stats whether here at WP or in my company’s websites. We also do not display in my company’s websites any stats counter or meter. But if I were to show off my blog stats on the sidebar, I would probably disclose the numbers this way:

Blog Stats
• xxxxx page views from (date blog or the Blog Stats started) to date

or something like:

How popular is my blog?
• xxxxx pages had been viewed by my friends from (date blog or the Blog Stats started) to date. Oh yes, they are very pleased too!

A little bit long, you think? But no one will argue the suggested wordings are not misleading. And they are easy to understand.

Again, in a worst-case scenario too, you can present a screenshot of your blog stats dashboard plus some other information about your blog to prove that the blog stats you are claiming are factual. That is, if someone starts questioning your numbers and you need to show proof. About your friends being very pleased? I am sure your friends would be happy to come to your rescue and say they are pleased with your blog!

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End Notes: The WP Blog Stats inside my blog’s dashboard is an excellent tracking and management tool. With the Blog Stats, I learn a lot about my blog. But when used as a widget and without additional information about the numbers displayed on the sidebar, the stats are meaningless. Did I step on sensitive toes with this post? I hope not. But if I did, that’s a risk I take.
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How to embed a Vimeo video

Following a tip in Comments to a WP’s support page on how to embed a Vimeo video, here’s a demo:

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The above video was embedded using this shortcode (no space after [ and before ] ):

[ vimeo http://www.vimeo.com/7243598 ]

How to resize

The above video can be resized from the standard 400×300 to a larger 600×450 by inserting the width and height parameters in the shortcode:

[ vimeo http://www.vimeo.com/7243598 w=600&h=450 ]

This is the resized video:

Hmmm, that was easy too.

Thanks T3CK for the tip. And thanks Ileane for the prompt.

More resizing and formatting

Using a DIV tag and CSS, you can easily position a smaller video (left or right) and wrap text around it.

Here is a sample of the above video resized to 300×225 and text-wrapped:

Blah blah blah blah. Blah blah blah blah. Blah blah blah blah. Blah blah blah blah. Blah blah blah blah. Blah blah blah blah. Blah blah blah blah.

Blah blah blah blah. Blah blah blah blah. Blah blah blah blah. Blah blah blah blah. Blah blah blah blah. Blah blah blah blah. Blah blah blah blah. Blah blah blah blah.

Blah blah blah blah. Blah blah blah blah. Blah blah blah blah.

Blah blah blah blah. Blah blah blah blah. Blah blah blah blah. Blah blah blah blah. Blah blah blah blah. Blah blah blah blah. Blah blah blah blah. Blah blah blah blah. Blah blah blah blah. Blah blah blah blah. Blah blah blah blah. Blah blah blah blah.

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Displaying photos in a gallery as an instructional aid

This is a plain vanilla photogallery I created to demonstrate how and where I grabbed the PicApp image codes used in my earlier post, Revisiting PicApp Images and Embed Codes.



The thumbnails above are arranged in the order PicApp windows are opened when searching for an image, and copying its embed code. The thumbnails were auto-generated from six images created from screenshots of PicApp windows and uploaded using the “Add an image” and “Insert gallery” functions.

These functions are detailed in the step-by-step instructions set out in a recent WP post, Display Your Photos In Style.

Hopefully, this photogallery can also demonstrate other ways of displaying photos in style and in conjunction with other posts.

Directions on how to embed a PicApp image in your blog are found in Revisiting PicApp Images and Embed Codes with references to a WP post, Free Access to Premium Images.

Have you tried setting up a photogallery in your blog yet? Need help? Feel free to leave a message.