I’ve always been a bit partial to Smushit…
- Has been a member for 3-4 years
- Exclusive Author
- Sold between 1 and 100 dollars
- Bought between 50 and 99 items
- United States
- Referred between 50 and 99 users
- Has been a member for 3-4 years
- Exclusive Author
- Sold between 1 and 100 dollars
- Bought between 50 and 99 items
- United States
- Referred between 50 and 99 users
to be honest it think you have a point. the footer is a complete copy. Dont be afraid to stand up and protect your work. In the end of the day you here to make money not make friends. The rest of the site may not be a copy but the footer is blatantly copied. I would send the author a message about the footer first before taking any other action.
How on earth do you figure that footer is a blatant copy? The colors are different. The hills are different. The CROSSES are even different… I don’t see ANY similarity aside from the fact that there happen to be 3 crosses in both footers.
- Has been a member for 3-4 years
- Exclusive Author
- Sold between 1 and 100 dollars
- Bought between 50 and 99 items
- United States
- Referred between 50 and 99 users
Hmm, I couldn’t design my way out of a wet paper bag… But I can code with the best of ‘em… and my only teacher was (and still is) Google.
I’ve actually had several job offers from reputable companies, but their salaries don’t even come close to what i’m making by freelancing.
- Has been a member for 3-4 years
- Exclusive Author
- Sold between 1 and 100 dollars
- Bought between 50 and 99 items
- United States
- Referred between 50 and 99 users
I like eText Editor for Windows… but I guess it’s more like TextMate than Coda
- Has been a member for 3-4 years
- Exclusive Author
- Sold between 1 and 100 dollars
- Bought between 50 and 99 items
- United States
- Referred between 50 and 99 users
WordPress is a content management system/blogging platform… Therefore, the site content is all dynamic.
This means that what you would normally have to login via FTP to edit, you can do by logging into your wordpress dashboard. This also means that to display the dynamic data you have to be able to access the database and use the template tags and functions that WordPress is equipped with.
Here’s a good resource to start with: http://codex.wordpress.org/Theme_Development
- Has been a member for 3-4 years
- Exclusive Author
- Sold between 1 and 100 dollars
- Bought between 50 and 99 items
- United States
- Referred between 50 and 99 users
Don’t mean to sound rude dude, but quite honestly, the so called “best in the business” are most likely already otherwise employed and won’t bother replying to your call to arms…
- Has been a member for 3-4 years
- Exclusive Author
- Sold between 1 and 100 dollars
- Bought between 50 and 99 items
- United States
- Referred between 50 and 99 users
November 2009: 2435 Clickthroughs, 10 Registered Members, 3 Deposits
December 2009: 6493 Clickthroughs, 9 Registered Members, 8 Deposits
January 2010: 2925 Clickthroughs, 0 Registered Members, 0 Deposits
- Has been a member for 3-4 years
- Exclusive Author
- Sold between 1 and 100 dollars
- Bought between 50 and 99 items
- United States
- Referred between 50 and 99 users
- Has been a member for 3-4 years
- Exclusive Author
- Sold between 1 and 100 dollars
- Bought between 50 and 99 items
- United States
- Referred between 50 and 99 users
Hey, you should go back and re-read my previous reply… I had to edit it…
- Has been a member for 3-4 years
- Exclusive Author
- Sold between 1 and 100 dollars
- Bought between 50 and 99 items
- United States
- Referred between 50 and 99 users
@Kailoon: No, you don’t need the no.conflict declaration because since v2.7 or 2.8, WordPress automatically loads jQuery in noconflict mode… So there’s no need to declare it again.
@digitalimpact: Why not just modify where wp_enqueue_script() loads jQuery from?
You can do that easily by adding this to your theme’s functions.php file:
function redefine_jquery() {
if (!is_admin()) {
// comment out the next two lines to load the local copy of jQuery
wp_deregister_script('jquery');
wp_register_script('jquery', 'http:// ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.3.2/jquery.min.js', false, '1.3.2');
wp_enqueue_script('jquery');
}
}
add_action('init', 'redefine_jquery');
I had to edit the above because the forums were turning the location of google’s jquery into a link… So be sure to remove the blank space between http:// and ajax.googleapis
