Nice comparison post. The thing about Thesis that bothers me the most is all the hoops you have to jump through to do any customization from a development standpoint. I don’t really use either theme but I’ve have built sites on both because clients requested them. The Genesis hooks and filters system is more inline with doing it the WordPress way than the stupid Thesis Custom Loop API. Any chance of 2013 update on this article? And while Godhammer and Phil don’t perform actual “moderation” duties, that doesn’t make their presence on the forum somehow “inactive” or any less valuable than my own role as “official moderator”. Well done Adam, a nice article. I just bought Genesis and a theme (haven’t even installed them yet) to go along with it. As a newbie to working with frameworks and very little coding experience, I think I’ve made the right decision. After reading your post along with all the comments, I’ve given me a good idea of what to expect. Thank you. ) Thanks for such a thoughtful, deep analysis of these two themes. Great impartial review. I know HTML well, but I think there is a lot of merit to Chris Pearsons Thesis ideology about having an HTML framework that is fully optimized and never changes. So school uniforms essay ideas, when I recently did a Thesis based site for a client I somehow enjoyed the lean theme structure. No big theme folder full of files. Just hooks and CSS. Out of the box, Genesis achieves a score of 82 out of 100 on YSlow. Its score deductions come mostly because my setup is not using a content delivery network or gzip compression. The deductions that can be controlled by the theme come from the 3 javascripts. Basically right now if you are considering BP or MS, Genesis is the way to go. Also, if you want access to a wide range of child themes with the convenience of 1 price & 1 location…. then Genesis is the way to currently go. And if you want almost thoughtless upgrades again Genesis. There are a lot of sites on the web using both frameworks, and if google sees that there are several structural elements that are consistent on each, maybe it could have an effect on rankings when those elements are abruptly changed. it’s worth thinking about at least. Thesis is rock solid framework but I like Genesis most. From Thesis 2.0 it is really hard to work with that. — Allow modification of every type of WordPress page (full list here ) and also allow targeting of specific pages, categories, taxonomies, etc. using the conditional WordPress template tags you know and love. First, you absolutely must have a development team behind the framework cranking out awesome sauce updates on a regular basis. Genesis has a great team behind it. With people like Brian Gardner. Nathan Rice. and company you know you’re in good hands going forward. Yes, this is thesis. and you def should switch to thesis as it sounds like you are like me and are not a developer in any shape of the word. Trust me (and anyone else that’s reading) you will have far more control over customization with thesis if you’re a newb like me. I probably won’t try Genesis, because I’m not technically oriented so I’d prefer not to start the learning curve over again w/a new theme. With that said, I don’t think I need to because I get everything I want within Thesis. “but due to a lack of active moderators, and only rare visits by Chris himself, it never seemed to be one that felt efficient – too many repeat questions were being asked, threads resurrected with non-related problems etc.” I’ll also agree that the lack of multi-site support in Thesis is inexcusable given that 1.8 came out after 3.0. As a newbie for about a year now on Thesis, I have spent a lot of time on the forums and have always had my questions answered very quickly. ‘girlie’ essay in my self, godhammer and phil have been awesome help to me. I have learned so much from them. The forum never felt lacking in knowledgeable help. They have gotten me out of some pretty sticky situations for a gal that had no web design experience when I started. I will admit WP / Thesis has been a big learning curve. The design options section has been really great for me. I wouldn’t want a framework that did not have the options that Thesis has there, since my css and php is very limited. For design options, don’t compare Genesis to Thesis. Compare Genesis+Prose to Thesis. The total page download for the Thesis homepage under this setup is 49.0-59.0KB. 4.9KB is from the HTML document, 33.2KB from 3 style sheets, 1.0KB from 2 CSS background images, and 10-20KB from 1 inline image. If you turn off the multimedia box image cover letter example for it job, the total download drops under 40KB, and you’re only looking at 6 HTTP requests. That’s still pretty darn slim, but it could be better. Thesis developer Chris Pearson has stated publicly that he plans to eventually cut down on the number of style sheets, and that would certainly help. For now, you can use W3 Total Cache to minify the stylesheets and combine them into one. That cuts out two HTTP requests right there. For the record, you can do the same for the Genesis fancy drop down JS and cut out two HTTP requests there as well. For the vast majority of websites, both Thesis and Genesis will work just fine. I find Thesis is a bit faster to develop because of it’s great Design Options (can jump in and set 2 column, specify order and width, font styles for headings and sidebars…). Regular folk aren’t designers. As a non-coder, I will say that Genesis with the 23+ Child Theme Options seems to be a bit more palatable to my small business clients, just easier to visualize their final product and a little less intimidating for some of them. Also, cost is a big determinant for me and most of my clients and both deliver HUGE value comparative to their cost, I think Genesis is leading right now for two reasons: Anyway the more I use it the more I love it. My clients have been blown away with the SEO options. I’ll be building my next few client sites in Genesis for sure, I can’t recommend it highly enough. Thesis SEO options are great, but the design options are where it really shines. You can control the size and color of virtually every font on your site all through the “design options” in your WordPress dashboard. You can also enable most of the commonly used javascript libraries on a site-wide or per-post/page basis with the use of an options panel. On top of that, you can choose from a page framework which is similar to the Genesis layout, or you can use a full-width framework which allows for more control of the site’s background among other things. Also, without being able to try out the theme or skin before you buy is limiting. I was able to test drive Genesis and it was pretty easy for me to adapt to their method. I point this out because I’d love for posts like this to be deemed completely unbiased – but where there’s a pattern (whether it be unintentional or not) of Thesis is better than Genesis because’s going on out there when they really aren’t true, it’s a bit worrisome. And I truly hate having to point these out, because many folks will think we are whining – when in fact we are merely pointing out factual information. Actually I thought about this comment again- there is a ton of Genesis documentation on their website which is very helpful. What I’m missing is a decent eBook or set or related articles that explain how to put together a whole case study, written for the first-time WordPress programmer. Genesis actually really straight forward once you have a grasp on where things are happening and how to control the output. If someone wants to write that book I’ll bet there’s a market for it. Having a widgetized footer is achieved through some custom CSS and your developer would be able to do this for you. ) I just want to have my site up and work. I want to move on to content-creation and community management. Currently stuck in the mire of web design. I am holding out for the Thesis team to continue to deliver as they have to date, but I cannot handle the wait for much longer, let alone the prospect of massive future alterations like the ones with 2.0. I think the support work that Girlie, Godhammer and highly valued contributors like yourself are a fantastic for Thesis, but due to a lack of active moderators, and only rare visits by Chris himself, it never seemed to be one that felt efficient – too many repeat questions were being asked, threads resurrected with non-related problems etc. Great review- off to Genesis i go! Contrast simply refers to the color of your text against the color of your background. Dark red on dark blue = bad. Both Thesis and Genesis having black on white = good. Moving on. Some of the highlights are things like import/export, Author Archive SEO control, register custom layouts, unregister default layouts, a new grid loop option, post format support, and I think most importantly, a new security and sanitization class written by Mark Jaquith himself. Very informative post. I personally find genesis more fascinating. But thesis has a better supportive community. Without any doubt they are the two biggest theme giants. A huge article to compare tow of the best frameworks out there. I have used both of the frameworks and now using Genesis for all my sites and clients websites and blogs. They both seem very comprehensive as you said but I don’t really know how intuitive the handling is itself. Thesis also does a great job with SEO options. While you don’t have as much control over the content of your document head, all of the WPGarbage is removed by default (as it is by default in Genesis). One thing Genesis does that I would LOVE to see Thesis emulate is the option to wrap the h1 tag on the homepage where ever I please. You don’t always want it to be on the tagline (though most of the time that’s fine). Adam, like Nathan and Craig pointed out – very thorough article, and thanks for writing it. I’ll assume that a lot of people will end up here at the post to compare the two, so props for putting this together. Personally I would like to determine which Framework would be the best choice if the end customer with simple skills has to handle design and modifications? Genesis definitely brings the noise when it comes to SEO options. No complaints there. In fact, I’m thrilled! Then, I go looking for the design options and an extremely efficient framework with phenomenal SEO options leaves me wanting more. The design options in Genesis leaves me sorely disappointed. Aside from the ability to add breadcrumbs (which you have very little control over) and an about the author box (which, again, you have very little control over), there really isn’t much there. Brian Gardner and Co. over at StudioPress have stated on numerous occasions something to the effect that there focus is not on design options. Awesome writeup! Quite impartial and loaded with useful info. Thanks! Could I ask if by purchasing and using the Thesis theme, I’ll be able to customize it to something similar to what I have now on my blog? I really love the Minimalistic design and would be really sad if after purchasing the theme writing an analysis essay, I can’t get back something similar. Second, I’m not going to tell you that one framework is unequivocally better than the other. I’m striving to provide an honest assessment of the strengths and weaknesses of each framework format for writing an english essay, and to give you the tools you need to make an informed decision. Great article. I have referred to this article many times over the past 6 months, as I grapple with changing to Genesis. I am currently working on a new design with Genesis 2.0. I will plan on writing a detailed Genesis 2.0 and Thesis 2.1 comparison in the coming weeks. Both frameworks do the heavy development lifting using hooks, filters, and CSS style sheets. The way they go about it is slightly different (okay, almost completely different), if you can learn to use hooks in Thesis, you can definitely learn to use them in Genesis. Thus, in terms of learning curve, the differentiating factor definitely lays with options panels. Cliff Smith says: We are not all web designers. We cannot work from a blank canvas then create professional layouts with navigation gradients, css borders, hover buttons etc. I did dig deeper than tweets, and I did put in a full day of research for this article prior to doing any writing. I just grabbed lunch and I’m sitting down now to add notes to the article to account for factual inaccuracies. All I can do is apologize. Unfortunately, I’m not sure its possible to be completely unbiased. I assure you it wasn’t for lack of effort. Thanks for putting together such a thorough review of two ballin’ themes! The best comparison that I have read by far. ) I just purchased Thesis for a whooping $199. SInce I never used anything like this, I am confused whether I made a correct decison of paying such a huge amount. I agree with you on this and in no way am I insinuating that you erred in the least by not including price as a criteria. Thanks a lot for this Thesis vs Genesis post. I read it and most of the comments too. Understandably in a debate like this technical considerations make their way to the forefront however it’s also important to consider the teams behind both products. I don’t know that there is much truth in this, but from a rational standpoint what Adam said seems to make sense to me. If, for instance, google recognized how to navigate a site based on a structure that it sees all the time (i.e. a WP framework like Genesis and/or Thesis), in theory it could crawl deeper, easier. I know you asked for evidence, and I have none, so I’m not sure that this comment has warrant. But since SEO is a bit of a mystery I try to think rationally in the sense that, though I could never create the algorithm, I can in fact use logic to create a list of things (over 200 some say) that make sense to go into the algorithm. There’s no argument that, at this point, Genesis provides less resistance if you’re a complete beginner with limited funds who just needs a plug and play solution. But this has been my favorite post so far on Genesis and did not even know much about Thesis until now since I am just diving into WordPress, committed, having decided it is about time I get away from HTML and Dreamweaver and spend more time on marketing and content. The added comments for 2 years strong is just as valuable as the OP! If you have any other questions, let me know. I’m happy to answer them. as far as the js goes yes genesis uses superfish for dropdowns and combining them will certainly reduce http requests (good point you made). Perhaps why i am more attracted towards genesis is coz it uses wordpress native functionality for powering its framework, call me paranoid but i like that setup ;-) i still think wp post thumbnail feature is the many debated topics when it comes to thesis vs genesis. Thanks for the comparison. I have been using Thesis for 5 years and I was very happy with it until they released Thesis 2 which is very confusing and difficult to work with. There are no good skins available which makes it even more difficult. Genesis seems to have such nice Themes and the sites look so much better. I am sad to leave Thesis mainly because their forum is so helpful but I think that most Thesis sites just don’t look as good as Genesis sites do. Genesis for developers, Thesis if you don’t have the patience. Elizabeth, Adam is right. I don’t believe either theme has a larger learning curve than the other. Neither Genesis nor Thesis pioneered the idea of hooks and filters. That was all WordPress. Thematic was one of the first themes to take advantage of Hooks, and the Flexx Theme from iThemes used them too. We all stand on the shoulders of great developers. Upgrades – Upgrading Thesis while not too bad, is still a bit of a chore. I’m always nervous about the upgrades, and they have on occasion failed or caused serious issues with the site (not necessarily a fault of Thesis). Genesis automatic upgrades are a dream. Please, can anybody refer me to a guide to apply this blogging framework on my blog? You guys have definitely done a great job of targeting your audience, and that shows with your results. As for SEO options on individual posts, Genesis is absolutely rockin’ here as well. Of course the standard custom title tags, custom meta descriptions, and custom meta tags are included, but you also have the ability to add your own custom canonical URL for each individual post. Awesome! There seems to be a vicious rumor circulating that you don’t need any help in order to get what you want out of Genesis simply because it follow the “WordPress” way of doing things. Because of my disappointments with my old love – Thesis, and the Thesis crew not apologizing for its dysfunction, I am hunting for a new love. Genesis looks like my girl. Thanks for the write up. I’m not going to give you a grade for each criteria or anything like that, but this type of thing has to have some structure, or I’ll end up writing a book. Thus, I’ve laid out a set of criteria that I think are crucial in determining which framework is best for you. This is by no means exhaustive, but it should get you started. Thanks guys for your ansewrs, however I’ve decided to give Genesis a go after a chat with one of the WP SEO guru out there… and I’m not looking back :). Using Genesis on one of other sites has increased the organic traffic with almost 50% (yes, doubled the traffic after installing the Genesis framework in connection with a child theme). So I’m convinced to use Genesis on other websites I’m going to build. Building your first blog or website is far easier when you have a simple step-by-step guide to follow. That is why we’ve created the world's simplest guide. Learn How to Start a Blog now! To get an idea of just how fast each framework is, let’s take a look at YSlow. YSlow is an add-on for Mozilla Firefox that tells you exactly why your page is loading slowly, and gives you a rating from 0-100 for your website’s page load speed. I’m running a fresh WordPress installation, and fresh installations of Thesis and Genesis. Also, I’m using the latest YSlow ruleset which is version 2.0, and of course, that means I’m running the latest version of Firefox as well. Now that Thesis is a different whole thing should you upgrade or write another review comparing Thesis 2.0 with Genesis 1.9 (perhaps) when Genesis 1.9 will come up? Genesis & Child Themes get my vote Five weeks ago, a new site that I am building crashed after I migrated two other Thesis blogs into the site. The site works with other themes, but Thesis keeps misbehaving no matter what fix I try. Thesis support and Girlie suggested a few fixes, but unfortunately they didn’t work. Girlie was gracious enough to offer to go into my site to take a look. She did. Then after three weeks, she got Chris to look at it. It seems now they are back to saying it is the data base which was thoroughly checked four weeks ago. Server works fine for other sites and other themes. (I don’t work for StudioPress, but I do build websites using Genesis) I think we are guilty of assuming that people WANT to design their own site. They don’t. Regular people generally suck at design. And the people that CAN design generally don’t have much of an issue learning how to translate that design into CSS (quite possibly the easiest programming language to learn. In fact, most programmers would punch me for calling CSS “programming”). […] “Thesis 1.8 and Genesis 1.3 Compared” from Art of Blog compares two of the leading WordPress themes. One of the criteria that the article uses to assess the themes is support and documentation. […] Great review. I have been using genesis for a while now, I have never used thesis though. A great resource. Thanks Adam! All that said, Thesis is still extremely powerful if you have the patience to beat the learning curve, or the funds to hire a professional. Adam Baird says: Another point is the use of each Framework on a MultiSite installation. With Genesis and it’s use of child themes, for a second site, you can just create second child theme if you want a different theme. With Thesis 1.7 and earlier (it may have been addressed in 1.8), a hack on core files was needed to get it working – that’s always going to be messy for those who don’t fully understand what they are doing. Disclaimer: I’m an absolute novice when it comes to coding. I would very much appreciate any comments you may have, and thank you in advance for your time! Genesis instant upgrades are pretty sweet academic writing essay outline, and involve significantly less risk. I have been searching for months and months for a wp premium theme pursuit of happiness essays, but for one reason or another (maybe lack of understanding) cannot find everything I seem to need in one theme. I finally found the one that entices me most, but love the idea of creating my own to emulate it rather than using the theme with all the inevitable upgrade issues etc. etc. hence the research time dedicated to Thesis and Studio press. Brian’s efficiency is rubbing off on us and he’s continually inspiring us to do better. Between that and customer feedback importance of my family essay, we feel that the next iteration will please a lot of people. I’ve just finished my second Genesis website in the space of 3 weeks, having learned the framework from scratch about 4 weeks ago. It’s simply a case of taking the sample child theme and fixing up the CSS et voila- website done. If you have access to the full set of child themes you can see how the pros re-work the standard Genesis CSS into pretty much anything you can think of. Adam Baird says: My apologies Girlie…I’ll add you to the list of people I’ve slighted and added notes for accordingly :) Also impressed with the rate of new theme production. Everything I’ve read till this line it’s was an awesome reading, but not so useful for me, I’m approaching WP Framework mostly because of “Time Saving” solution. Great comparison and, as has been said more than once, especially coming from a “die-hard Thesis user”. ) Well the last comment is more of a compliment for Thesis. Genesis child themes get you something to start with, but Thesis gives you unmatched typography and a blank canvas with unlimited flexibility and scope for your creative juices to flow. My thoughts, as someone whose used pretty much all the ones being discussed here (not Builder) – check out Headway 3.0… The reason it’s not a part of Genesis itself is because building design options into Genesis would have made our 40+ turn-key child theme designs difficult, if not impossible. I think after you look at it, you’ll agree that the Genesis product line is both powerful AND flexible. I was making mental notes as I was reading to pick up on the bits that I thought could do with checked, but then Nathan addressed them all in the first comment :-) Thesis without the multimedia box image or custom.css style sheet: 0.615 seconds I could have done a week of research and probably still missed a few points for Genesis. Like I implied in my response to Nathan, there’s not much substitute for being intimately familiar with a framework through working with it day in and day out. As I said at the beginning of the article, I do that with Thesis…I don’t with Genesis. Under the Files dropdown, start typing a function (like genesis_get_option) and it will show you the file where it is, and clicking on it you’ll see all the documentation on that specific function. […] Out of interest, here is a reasonably good comparison of current Thesis with its nearest competitor Genesis 1.3. The article is by Adam Baird and it is from the website artoblog. […] Eric Binnion says: When Thesis 1.8 dropped, Thesis added the new Loop API. This enables you to create absolutely any kind of template for absolutely any page on your website. Talk about game changing. Genesis does offer similar functionality with the genesis_loop hook, but it doesn’t offer quite the same flexibility or ease of use. Security is absolutely one of the central issues you need to be concerned with at all times as a webmaster of any sort. Genesis has been the industry leader in security since its inception. It makes extensive use of the WordPress security API, and has been audited by Mark Jaquith who seems to be considered one of the foremost experts on WordPress security. I have never seen the frameworks in the backend maybe I just have to try them both. I am a relative blog newbie. I had 2 blogs – one thesis and one genesis. Glad to know I accidentally chose the two best options. Adam, 4k words to who knows how many words. At the end of the day I think Thesis remains king of the hill by a slim margin. At this point in time Thesis is still – especially with the addition of the loop API – more flexible from a developers standpoint, and offers significantly more design capabilities for a novice user who may not be familiar with CSS, HTML, etc. You also get a framework that is blazing fast and built with SEO and content consumption in mind. Adam Baird says: The only feature of Genesis is it’s child themes which offer you several layouts. They all come with a compromised typography. Nothing more to it. I offer Genesis services not because I like Genesis but because my clients want it. Great Comparison.. Of course, the Thesis documentation is absolutely rock solid, and has gotten a big boost recently with the addition of Derek Halpern to the Thesis team as well as the talents of a certain girlie. You’ll find detailed documentation for every Thesis hook and filter along with a growing list of specific how-to’s based around commonly used design elements. Again, being around for two years longer is a big advantage when it comes to things like documentation, but you definitely have to be impressed by the docs that Thesis offers. Chris Olbekson says: Abhishek, I think the next update 2.1 will allay your concerns. To me, Thesis is the small block Chevrolet of WP Platforms. Learn how to write killer content, get more traffic, make money, and more by entering your email below: For someone who isn’t a developer or is more concerned with community involvement, I can see the motivation being quite a bit different. That’s a fair point, and there are a few unique features built in to each (teasers vs breadcrumbs, off the top of my head), but on the whole, Thesis and Genesis are so far ahead of everyone else that most of the built-in features that I use/used I consider to be equal. The amount of work it took to undo/override the default Thesis styles for instance, is equal to the time it takes to customise the Genesis sample child theme to the same level. Genesis has the bonus here of having lots of child themes as different potential starting points. With that said, I don’t think Genesis is a terrible option by any means. Its still very flexible, has great SEO options, and provides you with an efficient framework to build on. If you have the coding skills to do the design stuff yourself, its certainly a viable competitor. Improved typography and some semblance of a design options panel would turn what is already a pretty close comparison into a relative coin-flip. One thing I’m curious about. You mention early on in the comparison that switching frameworks on a well established blog is a no-no. I was using Thesis for a while, then changed to Headway for my current set-up (on my personal blog). Brian, as I responded to Nathan’s comment. I think better documentation is in order to clear all this up. I can definitely say that Adam spent a ton of time and research writing this article and by no means relied on just “marketing” or “tweets” to determine each framework’s feature set. Thesis also gives you the ability to control the layout of your homepage using any combination of featured posts and “teasers” to create a magazine style layout. Finally, you have near complete control over what shows up in your bylines, comments, teasers, and post content. It really gives you an insane amount of control over the layout of your site. Its not perfect, but its the industry standard in my opinion, and it completely blows Genesis out of the water in this department. “In a technical sense, the frameworks load almost 100% differently. Genesis more or less uses the traditional WordPress method of using different templates for the header, sidebar, footer, index, etc. Thesis almost completely ignores this structure. ” Is that a good thing or a bad thing? (that Thesis ignores that structure) Adam Baird says: Certainly, if you were switching from Genesis to something bloated and non-semantic, there would be a problem. But I can’t imagine switching from Genesis to Thesis (or the other way around) would do any harm at all. What are the most relevant developments as you see it. DIY design takes many, many hours. (Web design is complicated for non pros). And after all the tears, it’s still not worth it because DIY design usually sucks when compared to professional stuff. There’s evidence of this in Thesis and Xsitepro sites I see. Adam Baird says: As I said, the Thesis system involves a custom folder contained within the main Thesis folder…not a separate theme. The customizable ingredients are an images folder, a custom stylesheet, and custom_functions.php. Yes, I know you silly WordPress purists don’t like it because its not native functionality. Whatever…it is exceedingly simple, and, while I’m not sure its as intuitive as the child theme concept harvard business review скачать на русском, its very efficient and extremely extensible. With the addition of the Loop API (more on that in a minute) I would venture to say its more extensible than Genesis. Adam Baird says: One of the most important factors in choosing a framework to work with is the support that stands behind it. In my opinion this is a three-pronged ideal. Agree with you AC – a great article and some pretty informative comments. Adam Baird says: From what I gather from here is that both framework have their strengths and weakness and they are just going to be more awesome with each new and upcoming version. I look forward to utilizing both framework in future frameworks. Thesis was slammed for its lack of use of the WordPress API in a recent comparison of the major WordPress frameworks. Accordingly – I have no knowledge of any direct correlation – Thesis 1.8 has introduced use of the WordPress security API and should be more or less up to par with Genesis security. Adam said “Thesis also gives you the ability to control the layout of your homepage using any combination of featured posts and “teasers” to create a magazine style layout. Finally essay on book reading, you have near complete control over what shows up in your bylines, comments, teasers, and post content” Obviously you’re free to do whatever you like, but there’s a reason you don’t find too many blogspot framework comparisons… Admittedly, I was disappointed with the way that 1.7 was limiting with respect to taxonomies and advanced customizations of category, tag, and taxonomy pages. This was my motivation behind the new Term Options (more on this in a bit) and the Custom Loop API. Both of these new features in Thesis 1.8 provide an unprecedented level of control and awesomeness for this crucial WordPress functionality. I came here because I was just confused whether to go for Thesis or Genesis. With thesis I have a developer version. But genesis I don’t have any yet. But I was considering to buy Genesis as there are ready made child themes available, so I thought it would be easy to setup. Which one should I ready go for? Thanks for taking the time to compare the two – saves the rest of us having to try and compare them. […] know that WordPress coupled with a powerful theme framework is the best way to run a […] Note that your blog will use both your theme’s custom functions and OpenHook, so the two are complementary. OpenHook 3 and newer does not automatically import pre-existing customizations. You will need to visit the OpenHook settings page accessible at Settings -> OpenHook; once there, you can use the “Upgrade from OpenHook 2” button to import your pre-existing customizations to the new schema. You’ll then need to activate the Thesis & WordPress action groups as needed from the same settings page. If you have already modified your theme’s installation via functions.php. custom_functions.php. or some other similar file, you are welcome to port those changes into OpenHook to manage all of your changes in one place. Likewise, your theme’s custom functions file will be processed after OpenHook, so you can override OpenHook via the custom functions file, if you need to. If you aren’t altogether comfortable with editing PHP files to customize your site, OpenHook is for you! An increasing number of themes & plugins come equipped with a myriad of hooks — points within their code which can receive user customizations, known as actions — which can be customized from within your WordPress admin panel using OpenHook! Of course! However, what you are able to do with OpenHook will be limited. Still, you will have access to WordPress’ few public-facing hooks, the new shortcodes essay about education and learning, and the phpinfo() panel.
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