2928 readersIn order to help your visitors finding your best content, bloggers often display their most commented posts on their blog's sidebar. In this recipe, I'll show you how you can get most commented posts along with their related thumbnail.Looking for WordPress hosting? Try WP Web Host. Prices starts at $5/month and you can try
3367 readersYou might have noticed that the Tuts+ sites have a section on the home page where we list the most popular posts of the month, according to comment count. While there are numerous plugins available, it’s always best to write the code yourself if you can. Too much abstraction is never a good thing! Luckily,
4402 readersIn blogging, it is useful to be able to display your most popular posts. There's WordPress plugins to do that, but you don't need it: This code will display your most popular posts, accordoing to the comments count, without requiring you to use a plugin.Looking for WordPress hosting? Try WP Web Host. Prices starts at
3004 readersIs your blog popular? Do you got receive lots of comments from your readers? If yes, what about displaying the most recent comments in your blog sidebar (or elsewhere) to let your visitors knowing about the discussion?Looking for WordPress hosting? Try WP Web Host. Prices starts at $5/month and you can try it for free!Display
8253 readers
PHP
function most_wps_popular_thumbnail(){
$current_month = date('n');
if($current_month==1){ $last_month=12; }else{ $last_month=$current_month-1; }
$args = array(
'posts_per_page' => 4,
'monthnum' => $last_month,
'orderby' => 'comment_count',
);
?>
Most popular snippets
3913 readersI had the occasion yesterday to have a page with a section on it where it would output a very specific set of other pages, which would need to change dynamically. What I could have done is built a special page template for this page, and inside that template run a query_posts() to get these
7281 readers
PHP
function img_count(){
$query_img_args = array(
'post_type' => 'attachment',
'post_mime_type' =>array(
'jpg|jpeg|jpe' => 'image/jpeg',
'gif' => 'image/gif',
'png' => 'image/png',
),
'post_status' => 'inherit',
'posts_per_page' => -1,
);
$query_img = new WP_Query( $query_img_args );
echo $query_img->post_count;
}
PHP
16962 readers
PHP
function pdf_count(){
$query_pdf_args = array(
'post_type' => 'attachment',
'post_mime_type' =>'application/pdf',
'post_status' => 'inherit',
'posts_per_page' => -1,
);
$query_pdf = new WP_Query( $query_pdf_args );
echo $query_pdf->post_count;
}
PHP
Visit wpsnipp.com for details on how to setup this WordPress snippet. Share this post. Facebook | StumbleUpon | Delicious | Tweet It | Digg This | DesignBump-It | DesignPoke-it
4806 readersWordPress provides several navigational template tags to make it easy for visitors to surf your pages. There are basically two different types of template tags used for chronological post navigation:
posts_nav_link() – for navigating various archive (non-single) pages
previous_post_link() & next_post_link() – for navigating single-post pages
These template tags output the HTML markup required to create the actual
3509 readers//As you continue writing for WordPress more and more, the level of difficulty and complexity of your plugins will eventually reach far beyond the simple back-end data manipulation, as demonstrated in our beginner’s article. In this installment we’ll cover in-depth: database interaction, Admin Widgets, and Sidebar Widgets. Today’s example will be a custom built “Most