Book Image

WordPress 5 Cookbook

By : Rakhitha Nimesh Ratnayake
4 (1)
Book Image

WordPress 5 Cookbook

4 (1)
By: Rakhitha Nimesh Ratnayake

Overview of this book

WordPress has been the most popular content management system (CMS) for many years and is now powering over 30% of all websites globally. With the demand for WordPress development and skilled developers ever-increasing, now is the best time to learn WordPress inside out. This book starts with simple recipes for configuring WordPress and managing basic platform features. You’ll then move on to explore how to install and customize WordPress plugins, widgets, and themes. The next few chapters cover recipes for content and user-management-related topics such as customizing the content display, working with content types, using the new Gutenberg editor, and customizing editorial workflow for building advanced blogs. As you advance, you’ll learn how to use WordPress as an application framework as well as a platform for building e-commerce sites. This WordPress book will also help you optimize your site to maximize visibility on search engines, add interactivity, and build a user community to make the site profitable. Finally, you’ll learn how to maintain a WordPress site smoothly while taking precautions against possible security threats. By the end of the book, you’ll have the tools and skills required to build and maintain modern WordPress websites with the latest technologies and be able to find quick solutions to common WordPress problems.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)

Migrating from Drupal to WordPress

Drupal is one of the popular content management systems (CMSes) after WordPress. The Drupal framework provides advanced features and hence can be considered as more complex than WordPress. Many novice users tend to use a CMS without considering their specific needs or comparing it with the features of other CMSes. So, we often find people wanting to migrate a Drupal site to WordPress due to the complexities of Drupal, such as the low user-friendliness of screens and the difficulty they have extending features without development knowledge.

Since both are CMSes, there are some common components, such as articles, tags, categories, media, comments, and users. We can match certain data in Drupal database tables with existing WordPress database tables. Then, we have to transfer the compatible data to the WordPress database through a special migration...