The following code is used by Weaver Xtreme Version 4.0 to support Gutenberg block styling in both the front-end and for the visual editor in the back end. This code is subject to change as both We…
The WordPress Gutenberg project is one of the biggest changes in WordPress in a decade and we thought we would address a few questions and misconceptions about how it relates to TinyMCE. What is Gutenberg? Gutenberg is the codename for the new editor experience in the next major release WordPress. An official date has not...
Tiny Raises $4M in Series A Funding, Publishes Gutenberg FAQ
Tiny, the company formerly known as Ephox has raised $4M in Series A funding from BlueRun Ventures. Tiny is the company behind TinyMCE, a popular text editor used in many opensource projects, inclu…
WordPress to Support Classic Editor for “Many Years to Come,” Plugin and Theme Markets Expected to Drive Gutenberg Adoption
During the 2017 State of the Word address, Matt Mullenweg announced the availability of the Classic Editor plugin for site owners who are not ready to adopt Gutenberg when it makes its debut in Wor…
I just had quite some experience using WordPress 2.x's new WYSIWYG editor based on Tiny MCE, while publishing documentation for 3 column Anaconda Theme for WordPress. Two word summary of WYSIWYG editor: it sucks.
Those of us who work with WordPress on a daily basis have been keeping close tabs on Gutenberg, the completely revamped editor scheduled to be released with version 5.0 of...
WordPress Gutenberg Guide: How to Build Your Next Site With It
Want to learn more about the upcoming WordPress Gutenberg editor? We'll tell you what it is, how it works, and show you how to use it to build your WordPress content pages and make them more attractive than what WordPress gives you by default.
The New WordPress Editor: What You Need to Know about Gutenberg
In 2018, WordPress will modernize, streamline, and simplify the content creation experience with Gutenberg. It represents the biggest change to the WordPress user experience in several years. In fa…
During WCUS, we had a ton of volunteers staff the Gutenberg testing booth (affectionately called the “Gutenbooth.”) A huge thank you to everyone who volunteered their time and ran tests…
Gutenberg and The Impacts It'll Have on the WordPress Business Ecosystem | PerezBox
As has become customary over the past 8 years, I joined thousands of fellow WordPress enthusiasts and supporters for WordCamp US 2018 in Nashville, Tennessee. For me, the highlight is...Read More
Gutenberg 1.8 Adds Greater Extensibility for Plugin Developers
Gutenberg 1.8 was released this week with several notable improvements that will give plugin developers more flexibility in extending the editor. It introduces block templates, which developers can…
Gutenberg Team Is Ramping Up Usability Testing at WordCamp US
The Gutenberg Team will have a usability testing station set up at WordCamp US where attendees can participate in a round of pre-set tests that focus on the writing flow. Testers will answer a shor…
1.8 This release introduces several under the hood improvements to support more plugin opportunities — extending existing blocks, limiting blocks available, preventing a given meta-box from appear…
Testing Flow in Gutenberg: Instructions for how to contribute to usability testing
The new editing experience is now ready to be tested! In this round of usability testing, we invite anyone from the WordPress community to either complete a test, or moderate an observational usabi…
Gutenberg is the codename for the upcoming WordPress editor. It’s currently in beta and available for download from the WordPress.org plugin repository. The new editor consists of blocks that replace …
“Gutenberg” is the codename for the 2017 WordPress editor focus. The goal of this focus is to create a new post and page editing experience that makes it easy for anyone to create rich …
A Page Builder Creator's Opinion of Gutenberg - Benjamin Intal
Gutenberg. People say it’s a page builder killer. And being that I’ve created my own page builder, I’m obviously concerned. Will it kill all page builders?
Gutenberg 1.7 Adds Multi-Block Transform Functionality, Drops iframes Implementation of Meta Boxes
Gutenberg 1.7 was released today, two weeks after version 1.6, with a fresh round of new features, design updates, and the groundwork for nested blocks and block extensibility. Last week contributo…
This next release includes several features and improvements on many levels. We are adding a way to switch between the header toolbar and toolbars attached to the block by opening the toggle menu a…
The Gutenberg WordPress Editor: 10 Things You Need to Know
Very soon, the Gutenberg WordPress editor will become part of the WordPress core. What does that mean for you? What if you’re already using a page builder?
Gutenberg Contributors Explore Alternative to Using iframes for Meta Boxes
The discussion surrounding the use of iframes for meta boxes in Gutenberg became more heated over the weekend, as concerned developers implored the team to consider the detriments of the current ap…