Book Image

WordPress 2.7 Cookbook

Book Image

WordPress 2.7 Cookbook

Overview of this book

About 120,000 blogs are created every day. Most of them quickly die, but a few stay, grow up, and then become well known and respected places on the Web. If you are seriously interested in being in the top league, you will need to learn all the tricks of the trade. WordPress 2.7 Cookbook focuses on providing solutions to common WordPress problems, to make sure that your blog will be one of the ones that stay. The author's experience with WordPress enables him to share insights on using WordPress effectively, in a clear and friendly way, giving practical hands-on solutions to WordPress problems, questions, and common tasks ñ from themes to widgets and from SEO to security. Are you feeling limited with WordPress, or are you wondering how popular blogs do a certain kind of thing that you can't? With this cookbook, you will learn many WordPress secrets and techniques, with step-by-step, useful recipes dedicated to achieving a particular goal or solve a particular problem. You'll learn the secret of expensive premium themes, how to optimize your blog for SEO and online profits, and how to supercharge WordPress with killer functions used by the most popular blogs over the Internet.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
WordPress 2.7 Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
Preface
2
Finding and Installing Themes
Index

Getting posts within the WordPress loop


What is the WordPress loop? The loop is a group of PHP instructions that allows you to retrieve your posts from the database. In this recipe, you'll learn how to use the WordPress loop efficiently.

Getting ready

The WordPress loop is basically a simple PHP loop that fetches posts from the database and displays it on the page. It can be placed anywhere on your theme files. All available themes use it to retrieve the posts, for example on index.php, single.php, or page.php.

How to do it...

Paste the following code where you'd like to display the list of posts. Most of the time, the loop is used on the index.php, category.php, search.php files, but you can use it wherever you want, for example, on a page using a custom page template.

if ( have_posts() ) : 
    while ( have_posts() ) : the_post(); ?>
      <?php the_title();?>
      <?php the_content();?>
      <?php endwhile;
endif; ?>

How it works...

This basic piece of code first checks...