A Big Collection Of Gutenberg Editor Resources For Developers And Casual Users Alike https://t.co/ahhRV5HgwL via @wplift #wordpress #gutenberg #webdesign #amblogging
— Fistbump Media (@FistbumpMedia) March 13, 2018
Gutenberg Dev Team
What’s new in Gutenberg? (14th March)
Your Themes with Gutenberg
When using Gutenberg, in order to ensure that users of your theme stick to the color foundation you provide them, use `add_theme_support( 'disable-custom-colors' )`.
— Felix Arntz (@felixarntz) March 10, 2018
So I'm just getting on the #WordPress #Gutenberg bandwagon. The discussion of whether or not to have custom blocks in themes really got me interested about the whole project. https://t.co/n6xWmbyZ5P
— Mihai Iova (@mihai_iova) March 12, 2018
Question from the #core-editor Slack Channel:
What's a theme I can install to have get_theme_support( 'align-wide' )?
Answers:
Developers of plugins and products are getting ready for Gutenberg
Robby McCullough, co-founder of Beaver Builder on Hocked on Products Podcast
Well you can pull existing components into your block. Pulling full blocks into your block no "so" much. Hope that helps 🙂
— Zac Gordon (@zgordon) March 14, 2018
New blog post "How to Create Your First Block For Gutenberg" https://t.co/yMqfYzJIWw
— Nelio (@NelioSoft) March 14, 2018
We’re stoked to announce the release of our newest extension: "Events Gutenberg"!
— The Events Calendar (@TheEventsCal) March 13, 2018
We're bringing WordPress’ new #Gutenberg block editor to The Events Calendar’s event post type. Read about it in our blog series, "Going Gutenberg".https://t.co/NUD4vKfDFH
#BehindTheScenes planning w Josh Pollock @Josh412 for his talk at the 2018 JavaScript for WordPress Conference 🙂
— Zac Gordon (@zgordon) March 13, 2018
TOPIC: State Management w JS, Gutenberg and WP
Video – https://t.co/8eeGAbbnqX
Conf Site – https://t.co/Vo794iV6jR #UX #JS #WP #Conf #Deeply pic.twitter.com/zYs4ZSZw52
Excited to announce three new React tools/libs for WordPress: react-wp-scripts (create-react-app for WP), Repress (WordPress + Redux = ❤️), and react-oembed-container (to fix your Twitter/etc embeds). https://t.co/DP52oKS0UD
— Ryan McCue 😷 (@rmccue) March 12, 2018
Ya…the more custom blocks we see with custom endpoints, the crazier things are going to get for Gutenberg. Would be nice if blocks could just declaratively ask for the data they need, and declaratively mutate data back in #WordPress. Drastically reduce the weight of the client https://t.co/k11Zd5q3BR
— GraphQL for WordPress (@wpgraphql) March 14, 2018
Using Gutenberg
Does Gutenberg Address the Needs of the Average WordPress User?
Here is why #contentstrategists should care about the #WordPressGutenberg Editor! #gutenberg #WordPress #bloggingtips https://t.co/NBuy3ZXu7B pic.twitter.com/GcNjMGsuuw
— Scott Winterroth (@swinterroth) March 13, 2018
Frontenberg updated to v2.4 https://t.co/0jj7xYm3Ds pic.twitter.com/y7vkxoyIgU
— Tom J Nowell ✨ (@Tarendai) March 14, 2018
Gutenberg is very nice, but what is stopping blogging from coming back is the broken feedback loop: subscribes, comments, and likes are what makes people blog https://t.co/v6bpgtqlTx
— Michael Krakovskiy (@deadprogrammer) March 12, 2018
Anyone know eventual default handling of CPTs in Gutenberg? i.e. will ‘show_in_rest’ automatically be activated, or if not will fall back to classic editor automatically? Curious while doing initial existing plugin compatibility testing. Thnx. cc: @karmatosed @jcasabona @zgordon
— Damon Sharp (@damonsharp) March 12, 2018
Photo by Scott Webb on Unsplash