QueryPosts.com: A New Resource for WordPress Developers

May 7th, 2012

If you spend any time coding plugins or themes for WordPress, you know the value of a good reference for WordPress API functions. That’s why you should go take a look at QueryPosts right now, and bookmark it. At the time of this writing, you can lookup all most (for now) functions in the WordPress core, or you can browse by just the new functions introduced in WordPress 3.3 (I’m sure that this will update when version 3.4 comes out, Real Soon Now). A live-search feature makes it easy to identify functions, even if you only know part of the name. Features for inspecting classes or getting information about API hook usage are forthcoming.

Currently, as you browse functions,  you get a nice listing of the function names, arguments, return types, description, version of WordPress that introduced the function, and the file that contains it. When you drill into a specific function, you also see the syntax-highlighted source for the function, links to the source on WP Trac and on GitHub, and a list of related functions.

Based on what I see so far, I expect this site to become one of the standard references that WordPress experts rely on.

Instagram: My new ride

May 7th, 2012

My new ride

Instagram: I order you to surrender!

May 3rd, 2012

I order you to surrender!

multi-server continuous deployment with fleet :: The Universe of Discord

May 3rd, 2012

fleet looks like an interesting tool to use for scalability and continuous deployment.

multi-server continuous deployment with fleet :: The Universe of Discord