Let’s say that you’re working with Ajax in WordPress. And let’s say that, whatever you’re building, is using object-oriented programming. Depending on the complexity of your work, you may find that how you’ve implemented your Ajax functionality doesn’t work. That is: – You’ve implemented the proper hooks – You’ve got the callbacks defined – You’re `echo`ing […]
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[…] Design for the Majority. The WordPress Philosophy: Design for the Majority As the page states: Many end users of WordPress are non-technically minded. They don’t know what AJAX is, nor do they care about which version of PHP they are using. The average WordPress user simply wants to be able to write without problems […]
A couple of months ago, I did a short series on Envato on Ajax in the WordPress Dashboard. This month, I’m continuing to talk about Ajax in WordPress and how to include it on the frontend in your themes, plugins, and other projects. Though the Codex has two great articles on Ajax in WordPress – that […]
So what does it mean to use WordPress as a proxy whenever you’re working with Ajax requests? Check out these examples.
I’ve talked about Ajax in WordPress in previous posts and it’s pretty well-documented in the Codex, so I don’t want to belabor the point on how to actually implement it. Instead, the point of this post is to discuss how to implement custom response messages – or custom error messages – so that you’re able to […]