Remove #primary
Remove #primary, take 2
Change primary layout module to CSS grid.
Remove ::before / ::after based clearfixes. When using flex and grid, pseudo-elements are considered flex/grid elements and cause unexpected behavior. Clearfix is a tool to resolve clearing when using float-based layouts. Modern flex/grid-based layouts do not need them.
Main menu: Use flex as layout module.
Main menu cleanup.
Comments, Posts, and Post Navigation: Use flex for layout. Automatic RTL.
Remove errant test data.
- Fixed skip to content link to point to main content (#primary).
- Changed ID for <main> to #primary to preserve original separation between main and sidebar (#secondary).
- Removed superfluous ID reference to #secondary in CSS.
- Cleaned up whitespace triggering Travis errors.
Fix wpcs issues
Cleaning the rebase
Compile CSS
Remove primary div from WooCommerce too
grid-template-columns property doesn't support negative values
Bring code style up to the latest standards
- This PR addresses code-style issues identified when testing the code against the WordPress Coding Standards.
* Remove custom arguments from `the_posts_navigation()` and `the_post_navigation()`.
* Adjust fallbacks for `the_posts_navigation()` and `the_post_navigation()`.
* update pot file.
* merge master for style.css and style.scss.
Now uses the new archive template tags and makes archive template
titling way simpler!
Added shims for backwards compatibility, which can be removed once
WordPress 4.3 was released.
See https://core.trac.wordpress.org/changeset/30223Closes#556.
Set up author data for the author template immediately, rather than
waiting for the first the_post() call.
This removes the need to call the_post() and rewind_posts() in an
author template to print information about the author.
Fixes#346.
The current archive titles are verbose and fusty. This commit
simplifies them to the bare minimum needed (and wanted by actual users)
for description, orientation, and navigation.
archives.
We don't even have to check for a context before printing the
description, `term_description()` does all the heavy lifting for us.
Props @jasondpx. Fixes#128.
The ->data object (used previously) stores the author data, but the WP_User class has the __get magic method that grants access to that data, so using get_queried_object() without ->data is correct, and compatible with 3.2, which does not use magic methods. Also url-escapes get_author_posts_url.