MeetGavernWP v. 1.9.3 has been released!

A new version of our WordPress framework, MeetGavernWP v. 1.9.3, was released last week. This update fixes some issues that arose due to changes introduced in the latest version of WordPress, version 3.9, and also brings some of its own improvements, which are described below.

WordPress 3.8.1 has been released!

Version 3.8.1 of WordPress was released last week; it’s a maintenance release which corrects 31 bugs from earlier versions.

How does GK Grid for WP actually work?

Recently with our (M)Social theme we released a new Gavick widget – GK Grid. This widget is very flexible and powerful, so I think it will likely be used often in our other themes (it has already been used in our MusicState theme).

Our GavernWP v. 1.9.1 free WordPress framework update has been released!

A new version of our WordPress framework, MeetGavernWP v. 1.9.1, has been released. This update fixes some small issues and contains backend improvements connected with the visually-refreshed WordPress backend implemented in the new version 3.8 of WordPress.

GavernWP WordPress framework Quick Tip #10 Post Additional parameters

Posts and easy management thereof are probably the most important things in WordPress. The typical WordPress post editor offer very limited options for manipulating posts. However, not everyone is aware that all of our WordPress themes have a very useful feature for post management.

WordPress 3.8 RC1 has been released

Yesterday WordPres 3.8 RC1 has been released, so I expect to release the stable 3.8 version in a few days. This version brings several following features/modifications:

GavernWP WordPress theme framework Quick Tip #8 – Editing labels of Custom Post Fields

Some WordPress plugins use custom post fields to store data associated with specific posts. This can be an issue for some users as the expected presentation of a post may be disrupted by these additions, however others may want this data to be visible to the readers. In this case, there is another big issue – standard custom fields’ labels contain numbers, underscores etc… so they aren’t visually appealing.