April 15, 2020 — The block editor has come a long way since it was first introduced in the Gutenberg feature plugin. Join Miguel Fonasca and Greg Ziolkowski to learn about how extensibility has evolved from then until now.
April 14, 2020 — Learn how you can design and build your blocks in Storybook in order to rapidly prototype your ideas with this quick tutorial.
April 14, 2020 — Mel Choyce-Dawn shares her creativity and shows you how to produce unique and interesting layouts by combining multiple blocks in different ways. After explaining the core concepts she then creates several common layouts and uses no custom code to construct them.
April 11, 2020 — This session is all about kids and code. We will discuss why you should teach your kids to code. We will cover how to teach your kids to code. We will even talk about how to keep your young bloggers safe online. We will cover resources and what you as a parent, or teacher need to know to make sure your child is ready for the future in code.
April 10, 2020 — First, I promise you I was never a disco fan. (You’re over 50 if you got that joke.)
But I gotta say. Gutenberg has changed everything, and I’m over the moon.
Standard layouts with grids of posts? Done in a couple of hours.
Wild and crazy layouts, with all kinds of things going every which way? Again, Gutenberg’s the star!
And not just in experimental for-designers’-eyes-only pages.
But home pages. Archive pages. Pages of posts. Single posts. Even WooCommerce shop pages!
So let’s get visual!
April 2, 2020 — WordPress has come a long way from its humble beginning. Many of us have come a long way since our own humble beginnings with WordPress. WordPress enters our lives and we never look back. Together, we will explore all that WordPress has to offer. Whether you are a blogger, freelancer, or small business owner, you will discover how you can connect and grow within the WordPress community, and how to get the most from your WordPress—and WordCamp Seattle 2019—experience.
April 2, 2020 — As your career in development progresses, you may look back on code written by your younger self and wonder, “How was that ever a good idea?” Plot twist! That younger self was only six months ago. This presentation takes a look at ways you can practice care for your future self. Yes, documentation is involved, but we’ll also cover tools and techniques to make that task less arduous. We’ll also explore some neuroscience that might encourage some empathy for complete strangers who may be looking at your code. Spoiler alert! That stranger is you.
April 2, 2020 — You know security is important and want your site to be secure, but there’s so much information available, it’s hard to decipher the myths from what actually helps. In this talk, we’ll take a MythBusters approach to looking at popular security measures for your WordPress site, busting myths and confirming claims along the way. Come find out how to avoid the myths and implement security that really helps.
April 2, 2020 — Spend time talking with a group of web business owners and the conversation will inevitably include someone’s unfortunate experience with a terrible client. Most web pros have a story or two (or eight). While bad clients can’t be completely avoided, there are strategic steps any business owner can take to contain the impact of a bad client. In this session, we will explain the how to create a system that preserves workflow and keeps problem clients in check.
April 2, 2020 — This talk provides an overview of coding best practices with a focus on the WordPress coding standard. We’ll discuss how to use tools to easily automate your coding environment, project repositories, and processes to write code that complies with established standards. We’ll cover Javascript, CSS and PHP linters and formatters with tried and true tips and tricks to getting these tools setup to work for you.