Display Your Contributions to WordPress With the WP Contributions Plugin
Display Your Contributions to WordPress With the WP Contributions Plugin
WP Contributions
is a new plugin by Dustin Filippini, Damon Cook, and WebDevStudios that
displays WordPress contributions via widgets. Widgets included are:
Contributions to the Codex
WordPress Core Contributions
Featured Plugin
Featured Theme
Once activated, browse to Appearance > Widgets to access the new
widgets. You’ll need to know your username for WordPress trac and the
Codex to display your contributions. Keep in mind that the core
contributions widget only list tickets that are closed and you received
props for. WP Core Contributions Widget
The Codex contributions widget displays the most recent articles you’ve edited along with a link to see more. Codex Contributions Widget
The theme and plugin widgets use the slug of the theme and plugin you
want to feature. You can only feature one theme or plugin at a time
unless you use multiple widgets. The featured plugin widget displays a
thumbnail of the plugin’s header image, author name, version,
description, average rating, total downloads, and when it was last
updated. WP Contribution Plugin Widget
The featured theme widget displays a small preview of the theme, a
short description, average rating, author, current version, total
downloads, and when it was last updated. Featured Theme Widget
Even though the plugin and theme widgets are meant to be used to
showcase your own work, they’re great for featuring any plugin or theme
you’d like people to know about. WP Contributions comes with a series of
template tags for those who want more control over how the information is displayed.
One thing I’d like to see in a future version is short code support.
This way, users could create a WP Contributions page on their site with
easy to use short codes. It’s not supported now, but Filippini informs
me that a future version will include the ability to display badges
attached to a WordPress.org user profile.
As WordPress continues to increase in marketshare,
the ability to show how much you’ve contributed to the project is a
huge resume booster, especially if you can say your code runs on
millions of sites. In early 2014, WordPress made substantial improvements to user profiles but there’s no easy way to display those contributions to a wider audience.
WP Contributions does a decent job filling the void and is available for free on the WordPress.org plugin directory. I tested WP Contributions on WordPress 4.2.2 and it works without any problems.
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