#gutenberg Today's update of the #Gutenberg storify is the 45th update… Enjoy! https://t.co/OQNr7bV0LD w/ @karmatosed @nacin @zgordon @NaveenS16 @ataylorme @rhyswynne @elliotcondon @wp_acf @frontendben pic.twitter.com/4kk0gs5JaN
— Birgit Pauli-Haack (@bph) December 29, 2017
Andrew Taylor @ataylorme created a plugin with a #gutenberg block @CodePen embeds! What are you creating for Gutenberg? https://t.co/LW8T66mUrV pic.twitter.com/dNRyLGS6Yi
— Birgit Pauli-Haack (@bph) December 29, 2017
From testing by making with Gutenberg the past few days, I have found 5 potential bugs, 2 enhancements and 1 area that needs a design re-think. Testing matters. Actually working with the thing you are making really matters.
— Tammie Lister (@karmatosed) December 29, 2017
This accurately sums up *a lot* of the criticism of the Gutenberg editor. (Can anyone articulate why?) Personally, I’m really looking forward to seeing the creative things people will do with WordPress 5.0 in 2018.https://t.co/5bgRYekDCa
— Andrew Nacin (@nacin) December 29, 2017
My holiday project was a redesign experiment, putting Gutenberg at the heart of a minimal WordPress theme: https://t.co/kqTFvD4mJK…
— Tammie Lister (@karmatosed) December 29, 2017
Gutenberg Development ~ Beginner's Tip of the Day #18 🤓:
— Zac Gordon (@zgordon) December 29, 2017
In general, custom blocks belong in plugins, not themes. Themes can style and integrate to an extent with blocks though! IMHO#WordPress #Gutenberg #Deeply pic.twitter.com/iNAYlLDbW9
Creates a WordPress Gutenberg block for embedding Pens from @CodePen. A FOSS (Free & Open Source Software) project. Maintained by @ataylorme
— Ministry of Coding 🇮🇳 (@NaveenS16) December 29, 2017
https://t.co/33SfgxdxYd #WordPress #WP #Gutenberg
Gutenberg Development ~ Beginner's Tip of the Day #17 🤓:
— Zac Gordon (@zgordon) December 28, 2017
registerBlockType() is at the heart of building custom blocks. 📓 Here's how it works https://t.co/DH0LLorxkR#WordPress #Gutenberg #Deeply pic.twitter.com/2rfoPoq34s
ACF Year in Review: Looking back at 2017 and ahead to 2018 with Elliot Condon
Today’s job – half way through making @WPEmailCapture #gutenberg compatible for WordPress.
— Rhys Wynne 🏴🇪🇺 (@rhyswynne) December 28, 2017
Now to work out how to change the form elements…. pic.twitter.com/7oXPACmJMX
I think we will look back at 2017 and see it as the year the #WordPress project started to fracture. As much as the community desperately wants to see WordPress as an enterprise CMS, projects like #Gutenberg show it is anything but.
— Ben Furfie (@frontendben) December 28, 2017