I am using WP User frontend pro plugin to accept guest posts from the frontend form that contains several custom fields. Everything works fine after submitting the frontend form and even when we check the post from wp-admin, it shows all the correct custom field values correctly.
Unlimited post-type form creation. The forms give users the ability to create new posts and edit their profile all from the site frontend, so that the user does not need to enter the backend admin panel to do action.
Enable guests to post from your site frontend without registering with WP User Frontend, the WordPress User Registration plugin. Choose to require name and email address to automatically register and allow them to comment on their posts. Allow email verification for guests.
Appsero SDK does not gather any data by default. The SDK only starts gathering basic telemetry data when a user allows it via the admin notice. We collect the data to ensure great user experience for all our users.
I want to know that, is there any plugin or theme which allows frontend posting with post-format option? like tumblr. I tried woo plugin, which brings me closer to what I want, but it dosent allow posting from frontend, how can I achieve this, any idea.
@valuser I used wp-user-frontend for 1 week, after I got link from you, and it worked perfectly, where my user was able to post, edit their post (if needed), thats what I wanted, ability for users to post and edit without sending the user to backend and with subscriber role, but soon the plugin gave error, and thr was no response in support, after that, when I researched a bit, I got some info like this plugin is going PRO. but yes, when now I look into the plugin support, i am glad to see that its working. Thank you
I am working on a WordPress project where my client has guest authors allowed to submit posts but are having trouble figuring out the Wordpress Admin section and, in particular, how to embed YouTube videos in their posts. I added the wp-user-frontend plug-in which allows posts from Wordpress' front end. I added a custom field to the form and I am trying to intercept the submission of the form to concatenate the two values before the form submits.
I have been learning django for like 1 month now and i felt the best way is to do a project. i settled on a simple school management project but I am kind of stacked. This project has different categories of users i.e students and administrator. the school administrator should log in and add new students, the students should also log in and may be edit their profile. I created a nother app UserProfile with User as foreignKey and category
I added sample users from the admin site and am so far able to redirect the school administrator to his frontend dashboard where he should be adding new student. the students also are redirected to the students page upon login. i have a common login form.my first question is, should i have user as foreigkey in the student model like below?
From what I see from the documentation example, the main strategy is redirect. So once the login is successful users are redirected to the dashboard, else they are redirected to login.
But then how does the front-end get information about the user that is logged in? And does that information stay if the user reloads the page?
As far as I understand the reason why SPA is more applicable to SPA projects is that in an SPA project you have (non-sensitive) data in the frontend and you can route in the frontend from the same page. Having to go to the server for more data is not required all the time for a SPA and you never leave that page. In the examples I have seen if you have to go for more data at the backend the JWT is verified using a secret saved in the backend.
I initially built with tokens because that is what I learned in my Node tutorial. What worried us with tokens was having to store them in local storage. It was our understanding that there was some security risks with that. But I guess that is necessary if we want the user to not have to login every time they refresh the page. But then how would the app know the user is still logged in? Would the browser somehow send the token as part of its header when doing a get request to get the front-end?
And if users closed and re-opened their browser, they would have to login again, right?
I have done it yesterday, after checking out almost every possible tutorial about authentication using Node Express. After getting the token from the server I save it as cookies and log in. Every time that the user enters another screen I am sending a GET request to check if the session is still available. If not - then I am getting 401 error (unauthorized), deleting the cookie and going to login page.
BTW I am using react for the client side.
I'm looking for an easy way to place the user registration form on the front-end of a WordPress site. I've already used wp_login_form() to place the login form on the front end, but now I need to do the same with the signup form.
Gravity Forms is the best contact form plugin for WordPress, IMO. There newest version, in beta, has a user registration add-on. I have tried it and it works great. It will cost you though...it is $199 for a developer license.
Thus improving user experience becomes a key factor that you must give more attention. As the largest CMS globally, WordPress offers a wide array of tools to gear up your site ensuring the best in-hand user experience.
A user journey starts from the very first time he/she lands into your website. From this step to further, you must give them proper reasons and choices so that they can stay with you. Evidently, 75% of people get attached to a website if they feel it is designed to help their cause.
Suppose, you have a WooCommerce store. In this case, WP User Frontend let your customer create profiles, monitor their transactions, choose billing methods, and track their purchase process from the user dashboard at once.
Build Unlimited Forms: Create any type of form that you need to get connected with users. After installing the plugin, just click on add forms in your dashboard. And design any kind of form that you need. You can also have the option to use shortcodes anytime for that purpose.
Custom Fields: You can create custom fields with WP User Frontend. It will allow your user to include additional information while writing any blog post or while making a guest post submission. It helps you to track and interpret your user data.
But, when you have WP User Frontend in your arsenal, it always lets you create the simplest registration forms with a handful of pre-made templates. Here is what more you will get if you consider building registration form and user profile-
Customizable Profile Info and My Account: All of your registered users can edit and customize their profile data directly from the frontend. Also, they can manage their post status, comments, and activities at once in their My Account dashboard.
Create a User Data Centre: Whenever a user decides to hops into registration or subscription, they provide all the necessary information through the registration forms. So by gathering all that info can easily develop a user database on your website.
Run a Premium Blogging Model: For running a subscription business model in your content sharing website you need to create specialized subscription forms. For example, you can earn from each post from your user who wants to share their content on your site for more reach. It is more realistic when you already have an established brand value and reader-base behind you.
Regardless of any business model, content restriction increases the importance of your blog. It influences the random users to complete registrations for your website. However, it is also essential to give particular benefits to your regular user.
User Role-based Restriction: Inevitably your WordPress site has all different types of users. You can set separate individual user roles for all those users. And so you can restrict content based on the user roles ensuring that your premium content gets to the right & targeted reader base.
Taxonomy Restriction: This section allows your user to publish or browse categories depending on their subscription model. Not every user will be able to browse all the taxonomies. And based on user roles you may set and define certain restrictions with WP User Frontend.
This section is last but not least that we want to mention now. Without a frontend dashboard, there is no feeling of comfort using any tool. Your user is bound to lose track unless they have an interactive and responsive dashboard to manage all of their front-end tasks.
Profile Editing: Any website user want to tailor a splendid profile. Hence the profile editing feature lets them add or remove information, upload photos, and social links out of any difficulties.
Frontend Invoice Page: Users who make a purchase can simply track and manage their invoice with the frontend invoice page. It makes them feel safe and turn your online service on WooCommerce store into a dependable one.
Customizable Dashboard Experience: Each of your WordPress users can build their dedicated frontend dashboard. Customize and edit them whenever they want. To do this, you can use simple shortcodes generated by this plugin.
Therefore, the premium version of this unique and popular user frontend tool is a sure shot winner for SMEs and large enterprises alike. It is highly affordable, starts from only $49 a year. There are other cost-effective pricing plans as well depends on your requirements.
Sorry, if this has been discussed before (I could find only a few slightly related discussions but that probably doesn't mean a thing), but is there the slightest chance of implementing something like a "Carousel Core" that can be used for e.g. an arcade machine aimed at the dummy user who just want to select a game from a cool looking screenshot and some description text by basic joystick controls (left/right/button)?
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