Written by
David Artiss. Published 9 months, 1 week ago. In categories
News,
Web Development,
Wordpress.
Indeed, it’s more than updated… it has a new name. It is now named Artiss Facebook Link, and is part of a new naming policy for my plugins.
A short code option has been added but, more crucially for me, it uses my new coding standards including use of PHPDoc to document the code.
Full details can be found on the plugin page.


Written by
David Artiss. Published 9 months, 2 weeks ago. Last modified 9 months, 1 week ago. In categories
News,
Web Development,
Wordpress.
WordPress 3.1.2 has been released.
This release addresses a vulnerability that allowed Contributor-level users to improperly publish posts.
The issue was discovered by a member of our security team.
We suggest you update to 3.1.2 promptly, especially if you allow users to register as contributors or if you have untrusted users. This release also fixes a few bugs that missed the boat for version 3.1.1.
The official WordPress announcement
3.1.2 Codex Details
Change Details
A list of the modified files (between WordPress 3.1.1 and 3.1.2)
Download 3.1.2 (entire installation)
Download 3.1.2 (just the changed files between 3.1.1 and 3.1.2)


Written by
David Artiss. Published 9 months, 2 weeks ago. Last modified 2 weeks, 3 days ago. In categories
Reviews,
Wordpress.
So, I’m finally beginning to get somewhere with version 2 of my YouTube Embed WordPress plugin. As a birthday treat to myself I bought Professional WordPress Plugin Development from Amazon.
Now, completion of my plugin is even less likely to be soon as this rather excellent book has just left me with a raft of further changes to make. Everything from coding standards to widget development is covered. I’m only a quarter way through and already there are sticky note bookmarks everywhere – each indicating something I need to look at.
It’s not just this plugin this will affect though, as I will then turn my intention towards all my other plugins as well – starting with my caching and feed plugins which will get major overhauls (as this book mentions methods of performing each with a lot less effort than I’m currently applying!).
Even their section on marketing your plugin has left me with ideas of changes I wish to make – first up, I’m going to see about renaming my existing plugins.
If you’re into WordPress development I can’t recommend this book highly enough.
Now, if you’ll excuse me… I have a lot of work to do

