April 16, 2020 — Matt and Matias take us through what to expect in future iterations of the block editor and how you can better prepare for upcoming releases.
April 16, 2020 — “This session begins with three separate case studies – from Bill Erickson, Ellen Bauer, and Beth Soderberg – to help you prepare themes for Gutenberg and concludes in a tremendous panel discussion.
Bill uses his time at the very beginning to show how to improve content management for clients by applying careful, thoughtful work to your themes. In the second presentation, Ellen talks about important considerations when working on themes that you plan to distribute to others (that is, themes you plan to sell or provide to a large audience for free). Then Beth helps us to build smarter starter themes using better default block styles and support.
After the presentations, each speaker returns to participate in a panel discussion about the challenges and considerations they couldn’t cover in their separate presentations.”
April 16, 2020 — Enrique Sanchez is demonstrates what it’s like to operate Gutenberg using nothing but a keyboard.
April 15, 2020 — Victor Ramirez shows us a few of the more intersting possibilities with blocks, both by integrating withe external APIs and by expanding our perspective of a block’s purpose or functionality to include more than content editing within the WordPress admin.
April 15, 2020 — The block editor has come a long way since it was first introduced in the Gutenberg feature plugin. Join Miguel Fonasca and Greg Ziolkowski to learn about how extensibility has evolved from then until now.
April 10, 2020 — First, I promise you I was never a disco fan. (You’re over 50 if you got that joke.)
But I gotta say. Gutenberg has changed everything, and I’m over the moon.
Standard layouts with grids of posts? Done in a couple of hours.
Wild and crazy layouts, with all kinds of things going every which way? Again, Gutenberg’s the star!
And not just in experimental for-designers’-eyes-only pages.
But home pages. Archive pages. Pages of posts. Single posts. Even WooCommerce shop pages!
So let’s get visual!
April 2, 2020 — One of the most challenging pieces of building powerful Gutenberg integrations is working with the WordPress Data API. The Data API is how you get data in and out of Gutenberg, track changes across blocks, and execute events around the editor. If you’re unfamiliar with the Data API (or Redux, the technology that powers it), this talk is for you. You’ll learn why the Data API matters, how it’s architected, when and how to use it, and much more.
March 23, 2020 — It’s been over a year since Gutenberg was released with WordPress 5.0 and we have seen some great improvements.
While Gutenberg continues to outshine on the content creation experience, there have been so many updates and changes in Gutenberg that it’s hard to keep up. Many developers also find block development challenging because there is a learning curve to React and JavaScript
Whether you are someone who always thought of digging into it, but never started, the one who is left behind, or even just want to get your questions answered, this online meetup is for you.
It’s time to challenge those challenges.
This meetup helps you build those core concepts and have your questions answered, by diving deep into Gutenberg
Topics that will be covered:
– Touch on basics of Gutenberg
– Understand how things work in Gutenberg behind the scenes.
– Understanding the Gutenberg core.
– Build tools like @wordpress/wp-scripts and @wordpress/create-block
– WordPress Data Module.
– Current State and Future of Gutenberg.
– Contributing to Gutenberg
March 19, 2020 — ¿Qué puede hacer Gutenberg en WordPress en un gran medio? En esta ponencia pretendo exponer cómo de útil ha sido Gutenberg para The Sun, el famoso tabloide inglés. Con una redacción de decenas de personas y unas 600 noticias generadas a la semana, el desafío no era fácil pero Gutenberg ha llegado a The Sun para cambiarlo todo… para bien.
March 9, 2020 — This talk will cover off tips, tricks and workflows to make working with Gutenberg a breeze.