The new gallery lightbox navigation added in WordPress 7 is super cool! However, when a lightbox is opened in WordPress 7, it adds the inert attribute to all direct children of the <body> element. At UF, we used a Bootscore-based WordPress theme (a boilerplate Bootstrap CSS enabled theme), which wraps the site content in a <div id="page" class="site"> (see header.php), causing the entire site to go “inert” when the gallery lightbox is opened–not ideal.
Despite giving very specific instructions, sometimes users don’t follow them. By default, Gravity Forms does not offer image aspect ratio validation on a file input field, so I had my n8n WordPress code chat agent generate this. I have not tried using the code, and this was for a specific form, so it would need to be modified and tested before use.
Being a Linux-lord, I’m probably late to the party, but WinGet is the commandline utility for Windows (introduced in Windows 10) to install and manage packages, similar to a Linux or Unix environment. This makes Windows vastly more useable for developers. Here are some of the main commands that might be useful when working with winget. I used this tool today to upgrade my version of Windows PowerToys.
Some last names in our directory of faculty end with suffixes. This adds a level of complexity to extracting and sorting by last name without a custom field. A custom JavaScript function could be constructed to handle this, provided you know all the possible suffix variations.
As a creative problem solver by trade, the golden goose I find myself chasing time and time again is a simple elegant solution that seems so obvious, it’s surprising that nobody thought of it first. I’m a creative person: I know this because people have told me so my whole life. So why is this simple, elegant solution I seek so impossibly unattainable? The answer is perspective and time.