![]() ![]() In the short term I am not planning to add much in the way of block-specific functionality to MarsEdit. But when you edit and publish changes to your post, the block information should be preserved. Unlike the WordPress web-based editor, you will not see a visual representation of the blocks as separate entities in your posts. When editing a post with block-based content in MarsEdit, you will see the raw HTML for your blocks when editing in Plain Text mode, and a rendered version of the HTML in Rich Text mode. Because blocks are implemented using HTML, any app that can edit HTML source, as MarsEdit does, can also edit the content of these blocks. If you add new posts to your blog using the Gutenberg editor, you can edit that content in MarsEdit, too. If you also edit posts in the WordPress web editor, you’ll have the option of using the new Gutenberg editor, or opting to restore the “Classic” WordPress editor. What’s it Mean for MarsEdit?Īfter updating to WordPress 5.0, you can continue using MarsEdit to download, publish, and edit posts on your blog. Time will tell whether block-based editing ends up being common in blogging contexts. Typically blogs feature a unified design for posts, so that in the process of writing individual posts, you can focus more on the content than on the layout and organization of the piece. This change to the editor is part of a trend with WordPress of moving away from the dedicated purpose of blogging, towards satisfying the more general-purpose needs of a full-featured CMS. can be created and manipulated by dragging them around inside a post. Instead of writing posts as a single stream of content, semantically meaningful chunks representing different sections, image elements, etc. The fundamental change in WordPress 5.0 is a new “block based” approach to composing content. Although WordPress’s versioning scheme doesn’t place significance on the “round number” versions, this update happens to include a major rethinking of the default web-based WordPress editor, which they call “Gutenberg.” What’s the Big Deal? ![]() Congratulations to the open source WordPress team on the release of WordPress 5.0: Bebo. ![]()
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