background preloader

Blogs and magazines

Facebook Twitter

Think Vitamin - A blog for web designers and developers. WordPress Tip: Stop Editing TwentyTen Theme. Use a Child Theme! - WordPress « Rev. Voodoo. Shortlink: NOTE: While this tip is written 2010 specific, the concepts here apply to ALL themes, let’s read on! OK, it’s time for another little WordPress tip.

This one won’t be full of all sorts of code or anything. Just some general guidance, from me to you! Stop, I repeat STOP editing the twentyten theme. So why aren’t your changes to twentyten safe? Now for your options. Option #1, simple copy and rename. The only thing you really need to change here is the theme name. Once you have zipped up the newly renamed and slightly edited theme, you install it just like any other theme. OK, that’s the simple copy and rename method. First, just make a new folder on your desktop and name it what you like, I called mine voodoochild (its best to keep the folder name lowercase, all one word). And that is it! You now have your style.css file in a folder. First, this line here: What is it?

So what’s next? So there you have it. Like this: Like Loading... Smashing Magazine. Fine Tuning Spry Menu Bars | Simple Primate. Posted by jameswill on Sep 9th, 2009 in AJAX, Adobe, Dreamweaver, Featured Articles, My Work, Tutorials, Web, lodestone, lynda.com | 12 comments One of the reasons that I started Simple Primate was to have a public space in which to respond to students of my lynda.com titles.

I plan on posting answers to some of the most common questions that I receive as well as using this as a platform for diving a bit deeper into more specific issues raised by student feedback. In today’s post, I want to take a closer look at a question sent to me by Maria Osterhoudt regarding Spry Menus. Maria was having a problem with her horizontal Spry Menus in Firefox and was having a hard time tracking down the source of her problems. Maria had noticed that when testing her Spry Menu Bars in Firefox that the sub-menus would not reset if the user hit the Back button to return to the page. So, the first question is why is this happening? Javascript to the rescue… Adobe Forums to the Rescue! Try it out! Default | Fix. Simple Primate | Developing web pages with a pipe-wrench. DeviantART: where ART meets application!

Envato. Jshop Shopping Cart | Northampton Web Development | Blue Dreamer. Web Design Blog - Webdesigner Depot. Nenuno creative - digital design blog with a touch of creativity!