Book Image

WordPress MU 2.8: Beginner's Guide

Book Image

WordPress MU 2.8: Beginner's Guide

Overview of this book

WordPress MU enables you to build a complete, professional blog network. Each user gets their own blog, and can choose their favorite templates and plug-ins, and develop their own content. WordPress MU powers some of the largest blog networks in the world, including the mighty WordPress.com ñ home to thousands of bloggers. This book will take you through the setup of a WordPress MU-powered blogging network, using a real, working blog network as an example, so that you can follow the creation process step-by-step. Your blogging network will be complete with professional features such as friends lists, status feeds, groups, forums, photo galleries, and more, to build your own WordPress.com ñ a place where users can quickly come and create a blog for themselves. The book starts with a clean install of WordPress MU, and as you work through the book, you will build the blog network, and add on more and more features, all seamlessly integrated to achieve a professional, custom-built look.You will find new themes and plug-ins added to the site, as well as customization of the WordPress multi-user code. The book will also look at ways you can manage your community, and keep your site safe and secure, ensuring that it is a spam-free, enjoyable community for your users. In the later chapters, you will add a forum using the bbPress script, and add BuddyPress social networking components to your site. Imagine how good you'll feel when your first WordPress multi-user blog network launches.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
WordPress MU 2.8 Beginner’s Guide
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
Preface
Index

Time for action – editing your theme


  1. Open the Style.css file contained in the folder for the theme you are using.

  2. Look for an entry called #content.

  3. After that entry, add the following code:

    .mu_register {
    Width: 350px;
    }
  4. Upload your changes and revisit the sign-up page. If it works, you should see something like the following:

What just happened?

The main part of the sign-up page has its layout dictated by a CSS class called content. In the content class is an attribute called widecolumn. This attribute exists in the default WordPress theme but is missing from most other themes, so we needed to add it again by editing the CSS file. For those who are not familiar with CSS, it stands for Cascading Style Sheets and is used to style web pages. Instead of setting the appearance of every single element on your page individually—using old-fashioned HTML tags such as <b>, <i>, and <font>—you can use CSS to add styles to all instances of a specific element on a page, for example to...