MAMP 4 was released recently, though, at the time, I was busy experimenting with Pressmatic. I think Pressmatic is a strong piece of software, though, for my day-to-day workflow, it doesn’t fully suit my needs. So I returned to MAMP, and I’ve been thoroughly pleased with MAMP 4. No, it doesn’t use a lot of the same […]
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[…] configuration files in the hbs format are in Handlebars templates. Local uses the PHP configuration for a given site based on the settings of the php.ini.hbs file – nothing you change at the system level will change this. Random, fun(?) fact: Local was once Pressmatic that I covered several times when it first came out.
Though it’s been around longer than Local (or previously Pressmatic), MailCatcher was brought to the attention of many WordPress developers. In short, it makes it easy to start monitoring local development emails sent from WordPress. And if you’re someone dealing with templates, email customization, and more then you know how tiring it can be to tweak, send, […]
[…] the reasons behind this decision. Then, Bjarni sent me the following tweet a few weeks ago: Interested to hear why you moved away from MAMP to @ pressmaticwp and are you still using coda @tommcfarlin — Bjarni Wark (@Bjarni) July 26, 2016 I’ll talk about the transition from MAMP to Pressmatic in a future […]