The new WordPress editor (codenamed Gutenberg) is due for release in version 5.0. Now is the perfect time to get to grips with it before it lands in WordPress core.I'll show you how to work with...
Progress on the Gutenberg project, the new content creating experience coming to WordPress, has come a long way. Since the start of the project, there have been 30 releases and 12 of those happened…
A Gutenberg WordPress Editor Review Roundup - Opinions on Gutenberg
The coming Gutenberg WordPress editor is set to end WordPress as we know it. How does the community feel about it? Find out in our Gutenberg review roundup.
Announcing CoBlocks, Gutenberg blocks for Content Marketers — Rich Tabor
Announcing CoBlocks, WordPress Page Builder Gutenberg Blocks for Content Marketers. With CoBlocks, grow your audience and level-up your content marketing.
Block Unit Test Plugin Helps WordPress Theme Developers Prepare for Gutenberg
ThemeBeans founder Rich Tabor has released a new plugin called Block Unit Test for Gutenberg that helps theme authors test their themes for Gutenberg-readiness. It is similar to the Theme Unit Test…
Gutenberg 3.1 Introduces Tips Interface to Guide New Users
Gutenberg 3.1 added a tips interface that supports and guides new users who are learning to navigate the editor’s blocks and settings. The tips appear when a new user opens Gutenberg, highlig…
Jumpstart your Testing and Transition Plans with Gutenberg Ramp
Introducing Gutenberg Ramp, a plugin to help you complete your testing plans ahead of time and transition smoothly to the new editor, code named Gutenberg, coming to WordPress 5.0.
Interview with Matías Ventura on Building the Vision for Gutenberg
At WordCamp Europe I had the opportunity to sit down with Matías Ventura, the technical lead for Gutenberg. Ventura, who has been responsible for building the vision for Gutenberg (in addition to b…
A new WordPress content editing experience—Gutenberg—is coming soon to WordPress core, and 10up’s User Experience team is eager to understand how it will impact the experience for content creators. As a starting point, I created a usability test to study the experiences of professional, digital content publishers who are used to writing stories in the [...]
Matt Mullenweg Unveils Gutenberg Roadmap at WCEU, WordPress Agencies and Product Developers Sprint to Prepare
At his WCEU keynote address in Belgrade, Matt Mullenweg laid out a detailed roadmap for Gutenberg to land in WordPress 5.0 within the next few months, garnering mixed reactions from attendees. Gute…
Gutenberg Team Panel Talks Release Timeline, Theme Building, and Customization at WCEU
The Gutenberg team took questions from a full room users and developers this morning before diving into the specifics of the editor’s design, block creation, and how to further extend the new…
Learning Gutenberg: Series Introduction | CSS-Tricks
Hey CSS-Tricksters! 👋 We have a special long-form series we’re kicking off here totally dedicated to Gutenberg, a major change to the WordPress editor. I’ve invited a dynamic duo of authors to bring you this series, which will bring you up to speed on what Gutenberg is, what it can do for your site, and how
Going Gutenberg is an ongoing series about our journey integrating our products with the WordPress block editor. In this post, we explore the concept of Block Dashboards, including examples and screenshots.
The Gutenberg editor (slated for WordPress core release in v5.0) ships with more than 60 blocks, many of which are likely irrelevant for many projects. The official Gutenberg documentation provides methods for whitelisting and blacklisting blocks, but at the time of writing this, those documented methods don’t work, and there are several open issues in the Gutenberg […]
Gutenberg is the name for the new editor focus in WordPress. What is it? Why is it important? In this talk I will take you through a rough guide to the project. How it began and why it’s needed. Th…
5 Things I Learned Building my First Gutenberg Blocks Plugin
Over the last few months I’ve watched as Gutenberg has been developed, silently taking notes, watching for patterns and possible areas to excel in. Then I found that the domain Pillar.Press was available and it snapped me into action. You see, for about 6 months I’ve had the name Pillar saved as a name idea for a headless WordPress theme ... Read More
With WordPress 5.0 a new block-based editing experience will be introduced (a.k.a. Gutenberg). This new editing experience is available via the Gutenberg plugin. By adding this plugin to your (development) WordPress website, you can preview the new editing experience. At the time of this writing, Gutenberg is still under-development so I recommend only installing it Continue reading
It’s the year’s hot topic – Project Gutenberg. If you haven’t tried it out yet, you may be wondering what all the fuss is about. If you’re not already aware of it, Gutenberg is a new interface for editing posts and pages in WordPress. It’s currently a plugin, but there are plans to integrate it into WordPress core. So it makes sense to familarise yourself with it as soon as possible. In this post I’m going to give you a guided tour of Gutenberg and work through some of the tools and features it provides.
Happy Thursday :) I’ve started a new crowdsourcing project, the Gutenberg Migration Guide, to document WordPress Classic Editor customization points and their Gutenberg equivalents (if such e…
How to use external React components in your Gutenberg blocks
Gutenberg itself already exposes a lot of components ready to be re-used in our custom blocks. Most of these are located in wp.components and wp.blocks, and they include helpful building blocks for every Gutenberg block: Text
Neither the parent Genesis nor any of the official StudioPress child themes are Gutenberg-ready as of today. No doubt this is going to change but in the meantime, we can add support for Gutenberg in our Genesis themes and style the blocks to match the rest of the site on the frontend. This article provides... Continue Reading »