This is another test post to demonstrate how a “Halloween Bingo” players feed can be generated. This post, like my first test post, is filed under two WP categories: My player / site member name (Themis-Athena) and the new “Halloween Bingo” category. To distinguish the posts in the players’ “regular” feed from the admin posts formatted as projects (and culled into a feed of their own), I am again not using a “featured image” at the top of this post, but, this time, my bingo card as it stands right now:
Month: October 2021
Halloween Bingo: TA’s Test Post No. 1
This is a test post to demonstrate how a “Halloween Bingo” players feed can be generated. This post is filed under two WP categories: My player / site member name (Themis-Athena) and the new “Halloween Bingo” category. To distinguish the posts in the players’ “regular” feed from the admin posts formatted as projects (and culled into a feed of their own), I am not using a “featured image” at the top of this post, but rather, I give you my lovely Charlie and this year’s bingo card (after the pre-game use of two spell cards):
A proposal on what to do next on Squares
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Originally, I wanted to set out a table with the graphic and definition for each square, with links to a page for the square.
The discussion for that is HERE
Then I put the squares in an alphabetised list, all one page, with HTML anchors to speed up navigation
The discussion for that is HERE
I quite like the alphabetical list. It’s easy to use and it doesn’t feel cluttered. It’s made me re-think the idea of a table with all the graphics on.
I propose that we keep the format of the alphabetical list as it is and build a page for each square and link it to the alphabetical list. At the moment, the links on the alphabetical list take you to the graphic, definition and discussion for that square on GoodReads. I’d replace those links with links to new pages.
I imagine the Square Page as being similar to what’s on GR:
- The Square Graphic
- The Square Definition
- A curated list of books that fit the square.
I’d start by copying across most of the information on the relevant page from GR. We can then curate the booklist and check it’s still current.
Later we can link the booklist to a Games Library which would show all of the books listed for a square and all of the squares that they’re listed for.
Please give me your thoughts. Once we’re agreed, I’ll set up a demo Square Page.
Testing menus with categories and tags
Murder by Death
I attempted to create a menu item that would only display specific categories, hoping to do it based on the character match. Alas, it didn’t work. Neither did one with tags. I might be missing something, because menus do get a bit tricky, but if I didn’t, we might want to rethink how we use categories. Do we want each user to have their own category, or do we want to use it for site organisation?
Doing both makes for a very unwieldy menu that would be unusable.
“Posts” vs. “Pages” vs. “Projects”
Themis-Athena
10/01/2021
This is in response to comments made / questions asked earlier (by MbD and / or Christine) re: the working of “project” pages.
Leaving aside special formats such as quotes and image galleries etc., WP basically allows for three types of posts (or post-like input): “posts”, “pages” and “projects”. Those who are familiar with WP will know most or all of this — or at least most of what I’m saying about the first two of these — but briefly, to put things into context, especially for the WP newbies:
Posts are those contributions of yours that go into the blogroll / continuous feed (= the dashboard on BookLikes). On WP, they come with both a “like” and a “comment” option; i.e., essentially they work the way things did on BL — we can have discussions right in the comments section of the post. As comments are “nested” (i.e., replies and follow-up comments are indented further than the original comment, even if in this particular design theme not quite as clearly as on BL), several conversations on the same post can go on at the same time without comments overlapping and getting in each others’ way.
This is how probably somewhere around 90% (or at any rate, the vast majority) of the contents of the joint blog will be created.
Pages are contributions that do NOT go into the blogroll / continuous feed. You have to specifically make them visible in some way or other, e.g., by including them in a sidebar or top bar menu which then links to the page in question (or by linking there from another page).
Also, pages do not have a comment function (though on WP you can “like” them).
Thus, pages are a great place for permanent admin announcements — e.g., the Bingo Rules on this blog are formatted as a page. So is my main Literature index on my personal blog.
Projects are essentially a combination / cross section of posts and pages. Like posts, they allow for both comments and “likes”. However, like pages, they do not appear in the main blogroll / feed but have to be made visible in another way (e.g., as part of a menu). The black admin sidebar category under which you find all of a given blog’s projects is called “Portfolio” (it sits right under “Pages”). Also, projects do not share the blog posts’ tags and categories: that way, you can (inter alia) create one or more separate feeds for your projects to which you can also link (instead of just to a single project) from a menu.
I think on this blog, “projects” may be a good tool for every type of post that, on the one hand, we want site members to be able to access at all times without having to search the main blogroll / feed, and which on the other hand, we want people to be able to comment on.
E.g., I don’t know whether the Nose Graze plugin would allow us to create book lists — if it doesn’t, we could copy over the existing book lists for the various bingo squares into one project page per square / book list, to which others then could either add books directly (if they have the admin rights to do so) or make suggestions in the comments (the way we originally did this on BL, except that this time it wouldn’t fall to MbD alone to add the books; everybody with admin rights could pitch in).
Ditto the “Questions” section: We could create one basic “Questions” project page / post, include it in one of the overall bingo admin menus (sidbar or top bar), and questions could then be asked in the comments — with the answers to questions that don’t merely concern a single issue (e.g., “can book xyz be used for square abc?”) but a matter of policy (such as some of my questions in this year’s game as to the interplay of various spell cards) then — if we think it might come up again — copied into the main body of the “questions” project post as such.
On my personal blog, I am using “projects” mainly for the master update posts concerning my various reading projects; e.g., Halloween Bingo 2021.
BUT note that my top menu bar contains links — other than to my main blog post feed and my contact page — to my main index pages (literature, movies, music; all formatted as WP “pages”) AS WELL AS to the separate “(ongoing) projects” blogroll generated from all those of my projects in a portfolio category named (you guessed it) “ongoing”. A separate additional menu showing all of my ongoing projects is contained in my sidebar (as are menus for my completed projects and a number of other indexes) . So, visitors to my blog have two different ways of finding the master update posts for all my ongoing projects in one place; either via the top bar menu and the dedicated “ongoing projects” blogroll linked there, or via the relevant sidebar menu. I think we could do something similar for those bingo admin posts that do invite comments (and therefore can’t be formatted as WP “pages”), but which should nevertheless be accessible at all times without getting buried in the main blog post feed.
Essentially, the combination of separate “project” blogrolls and menus would allow us to create dedicated discussion sections or feeds that could have a similar function as the “discussion” subsections on Goodreads (“admin”, “the squares”, etc.) without interfering with the main blog feed and / or with the blog members’ individual feeds, such as auto-generated on the basis of their authorship category.
I hope this doesn’t all sound too complicated — it really isn’t; it’s probably just a matter of playing around with things … and there are probably also yet more ways of using “projects” that will occur to us once we start tinkering with the feature.
Meandering Thoughts 2.0
Christine; 10.01.2021 Note: since we are private I am considering using a picture of my actual face here, just for fun.
Today is my 27th wedding anniversary, which gets a woo hoo. I have been married to my husband for almost as long as I wasn’t married to him – I’m 55. Next year this will flip, and I will have been married to him for longer than I was alive before I married him. Crazy, huh?
Anyway, I changed the “header” image, although that’s sort of a dumb name for it, because it’s on the side, not the top. The blurriness of the image I was using was bugging me and I couldn’t figure out how to fix the issue, so I just found something new. It is suitably spooky, I think. Plus, a cat!
I also changed our secondary site identity line to “An International Bookish Community” because I think that describes us quite well!
In addition, I figured something else out last night and now I feel dumb. We don’t really need to give anyone their own category because if you click on the author name at the bottom of the post, it provides a separate feed for only those author posts. We could use categories for organization, rather than to create an author menu if we want to.
Welcome to Themis, Darth & OB, and anyone else who checks in!
GDPR Stuff
I find this infographic helpful. If you’re interested, it’s easiest to read as a PDF
The best source I know of for the EU view on this stuff is here: https://ec.europa.eu/info/law/law-topic/data-protection/eu-data-protection-rules_en
Here’s the Brit version:
https://ico.org.uk/for-organisations/guide-to-data-protection/guide-to-the-general-data-protection-regulation-gdpr/
Here’s what being sold for WP sites:
https://www.tutorialchip.com/wordpress/best-wordpress-plugins-for-gdpr-compliance-2021/
Test Post
Testing, testing — does this paragraph hand-coded in Century Gothic font wrap around the image if I left-float the image and type enough words, and does it align as “justify”? Do my font size and line-height adjustments work as I want them to?
How big is a paragraph break?
Does my author name show properly?
Darth Pedant’s Adventures in Pottering, Ep. 01
Apropos of nothing, here’s a random picture of a past cross-stitch project
that took me over a decade to complete because I noticed a stupid mistake and got so disgusted with myself that I stopped stitching for years. (Not really. There were other mitigating factors too, but that mistake did haunt me until I figured out how to fix it.)
This UI is going to take a little getting used to, but so far I wouldn’t say the learning curve has been any steeper than it was with BL. I like the ease of moving the image around in the post. I don’t remember being able to do that on BL, but maybe you can and I just never figured out how. It’s entirely possible. And yes, I did just add this rambling paragraph to get enough text to see how it wraps around the image. That spacing at the top is going to bug me, isn’t it?
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