Tom McFarlin

Software Engineering in Web Development, Backend Services, and More

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We’re Ignoring the WordPress Philosophy: Design for the Majority

Earlier this week, I shared my thoughts on how I believe that many of us who are participating in the WordPress economy are practically ignoring the WordPress philosophy.

There are a number of different pillars on which this philosophy sits, the first of which is Out of the Box. But there are more each of which I want to share my thoughts on as it relates to building themes an other things for WordPress.

If you’re unfamiliar with what I’m talking about, then be sure to check out the WordPress Philosophy first; otherwise, much of this likely won’t make sense.

With that said, on to the second point: Design for the Majority.

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The Ultimate Goals of the Pressware Shop

About a month ago, I talked about some of the projects that were in the Pressware Pipeline two of which included the following:

  1. Mayer
  2. “The Pressware eCommerce Gateway,” my choice of words (not as elegant as they should’ve been I suppose :).

As of today, these two projects are officially launched and I couldn’t be more excited. That is, Mayer is now available for self-hosted installations, and The Pressware Shop is now open.

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We’re Ignoring the WordPress Philosophy: Out of the Box

If you head over to the WordPress.org homepage and click on the About link, you’ll be taken to a page that, y’know, tells what WordPress.org is all about, what the software can be used for, some history, and so on.

About WordPress.org

Then, there are also links to various WordPress-related collateral such as logos and graphics, fan art, the GPL, the project roadmap, and the philosophy.

Wait, what? A philosophy?

Exactly. WordPress – a piece of software – has a philosophy. It’s a really, really neat page that I think everyone who is involved with WordPress – be it designers, developers, or users – should read. It’s not technical, it’s easy to understand, and it helps inform us what the software is all about.

As far as developers are concerned, there are a number of things in the philosophy that I believe we give excellent lip service, but we don’t actually practice, abide, or behave in such a way that we support the philosophy.

That’s a longer post for another time.

Anyway, though there’s a number of things in the philosophy that could be discussed (and probably ultimately will be :), one of the many things that we’ve forsaken is the “out of the box” philosophy.

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Easily Install phpDocumentor Alongside MAMP Pro

In previous posts, I’ve talked about the WordPress Coding Standards, and the importance of documenting your code, but I’ve not actually spent a lot of time discussing how easy it is to actually generate documentation for your themes.

And by documentation, I mean an actual site that provides your DocBlocks such in a clean and organized fashion – you know, sites that are generated by tools like phpDocumentor.

phpDocumentor Example

An example of a site generated by phpDocumentor.

In other posts, I’ve mentioned that I use MAMP Pro for part of my development stack, so if you’re looking for steps to install phpDocumentor, it’s actually really easy to do.

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Freelancing and Working With Others (Or “Do Not Be Forever Alone”)

Every now and then, I’ll get questions via email, Twitter, or blog comments that I want to answer. The thing is, answer in and of itself would be longer than the original blog post itself so I try to keep it concise for the sake of not detracting too much from the initial post.

When that happens, I usually respond as much as I can without going over board, but I actually do keep a copy of the questions so that I can answer them later.

And that normally goes well on days like today.

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