Book Image

WordPress 2.8 Theme Design

Book Image

WordPress 2.8 Theme Design

Overview of this book

Themes are among the most powerful features that can be used to customize a web site, especially in WordPress. Using custom themes you can brand your site for a particular corporate image, ensure standards compliance, and create easily navigable layouts. But most WordPress users still continue to use default themes as developing and deploying themes that are flexible and easily maintainable is not always straightforward. It's easy to create powerful and professional themes for your WordPress web site when you've got this book to hand. It provides clear, step-by-step instructions to create a robust and flexible WordPress theme, along with best practices for theme development. It will take you through the ins and outs of creating sophisticated professional themes for the WordPress personal publishing platform. It reviews the best practices from development tools and setting up your WordPress sandbox, through design tips and suggestions, to setting up your theme's template structure, coding markup, testing and debugging, to taking it live. The last three chapters are dedicated to additional tips, tricks, and various cookbook recipes for adding popular site enhancements to your WordPress theme designs using third-party plugins. Whether you're working with a pre-existing theme or creating a new one from the ground up, WordPress Theme Design will give you the know-how to understand how themes work within the WordPress blog system, enabling you to take full control over your site's design and branding.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
WordPress 2.8 Theme Design
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
Preface
Index

Advanced validation


Perhaps you've discovered (because you are talented indeed and would find something like this) that your XHTML and CSS validates, yet somehow something is still wrong with your layout. Or maybe, you're using some special JavaScripts to handle certain aspects or features of your theme. W3C's XHTML and CSS tools won't validate JavaScript. If you find yourself in this situation, you're going to have to dig a little deeper to get to the root of the problem and/or make sure all aspects (such as JavaScripts) of your theme's files are valid.

Firefox's JavaScript/Error Console

You can use Firefox's JavaScript/Error Console (called the JavaScript Console in 1.x and Error Console in 2.x) to debug and validate any JavaScripts your theme is using. Go to Tools | Error Console in your browser to activate it; you can also activate it by typing JavaScript: into your address bar and hitting Enter on your keyboard.

You will be pleasantly surprised to find out that the console will also spit...