Marius L. Jensen

Results 76 comments of Marius L. Jensen

Any reason not to fork the `handbook` wporg plugin for this, I see it handles styling, creates widgets that are needed and such (instead of reinventing the wheel, I'd rather...

#203 has introduced the sidebar as discussed, but what hasn't been covered here is what it's meant to include of content, and how it's intended to be populated.

The Site Health checks and debug information have been taken out of the Health Check plugin as of version 1.5.0 (with some backwards compatible layers for sites running WordPress versions...

You are absolutely correct, unfortunately I've been struggling to keep up with maintaining the plugin and core side by side, as core moves faster. I'm working on resolving this though,...

With the release of 1.5.0, WordPress core is now used for the site health checks, and debug data. A backwards compatibility layer for WP versions earlier than 5.2.0 has been...

Hmm, that requires WordPress 4.4 as a minimum (we're currently supporting back to 4.0) though. I do absolutely agree that this is a good idea, so I'm going to add...

It hasn't, no, and I don't think that fits into core either, that's more a troubleshooting step and is plugin territory (it's also hard to do reliable e-mail testing, which...

I have a few concerns regarding this. Firstly, to enable debugging your `wp-config.php` file needs to be edited, I'd rather a user do the editing than us try to programatically...

I'll definitely like to leave it open for input from others, as we've got two opposite views it would be great to let it sit and wait for input from...

Just some more thoughts I've had over the last few weeks on the issue. We could consider this, the main issue is the `wp-config.php` file to enable the debug flags,...