by jdalmeida
0 (0 reviews)
The Future Posts
Display future (scheduled) posts in responsive grids using shortcodes. Works with PODS, Advanced Custom Fields, WooCommerce, and all page builders.
Tested up to WP 4.9.28 (Current: 6.8.2)
v1.40
Current Version v1.40
Updated 7 years ago
Last Update on 07 Aug, 2018
Synced 1 day ago
Last Synced on
Rank
#25,875
—
No change
Active Installs
20+
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No change
KW Avg Position
45
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No change
Downloads
2.6K
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Total downloads
Support Resolved
0%
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No change
Rating
0%
Review 0 out of 5
0
(0 reviews)
Next Milestone 30
20+
30+
3,253
Ranks to Climb
-
Growth Needed
28
Current Installs
Need 2 more installs to reach 30+
Rank Changes
Current
#25,875
Change
Best
#
Active Installs Growth
Downloads Growth
Reviews & Ratings
0.0
0 reviews
Overall
0%
5
0
(0%)
4
0
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3
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2
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1
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Tracked Keywords
Showing 1 of 1| Keyword | Position | Change | Type | Updated |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| pods | 45 | — | Tag | 1 day ago |
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- Version
- 1.40
- Last Updated
- Aug 07, 2018
- Requires WP
- 4.6.0+
- Tested Up To
- 4.9.28
- PHP Version
- 5.6.0 or higher
- Author
- jdalmeida
Support & Rating
- Rating
- ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ 0
- Reviews
- 0
- Support Threads
- 0
- Resolved
- 0%
Keywords
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Upgrade NowFrequently Asked Questions
Common questions about The Future Posts
Gridlex. A very simple, lightweight, fast, reliable and responsive CSS-only grid system, supported by media queries, to quickly create modern layouts. Based on Flexbox (CSS Flexible Box Layout Module). Copyright © 2016 by Laurent G. / http://gridlex.devlint.fr/
Yes. You can use The Future Posts shortcodes on any page or post using the WordPress text editor. Just insert the shortcode where you want the The Future Posts grid to appear. You can insert multiple instances of The Future Posts on the same page or post, each one with its own specific settings.
Yes. You can use The Future Posts shortcodes on sidebars and widget areas like footers. On the Appearance / Widgets admin page just use the Text widget or the Custom HTML widget to insert the shortcode(s).
Yes. As being a shortcode, The Future Posts is compatible with virtually any page builder of your choice, like Elementor, Beaver Builder, WPBakery / Visual Composer, etc. Refer to the Options page for details.
Yes. You can create as many Themes as you want, and apply them to any instance of The Future Posts. Use the Custom Theme CSS sample, available on the Options page, to construct you own Themes. I do encourage Third Party Themes. Let me know if you have a great Custom Theme to share, perhaps it can be included on a future release.
Yes. For published only posts, use this shortcode: [the_future_posts post_status="publish" date_before="today" date_after="today"] And for simultaneous scheduled and published posts, use this shortcode: [the_future_posts post_status="future,publish" date_before="today" date_after="today"]
Yes. Since this plugin changes the post status of every scheduled post (from 'future' to 'publish'), you cannot use post_status='future' attribute (as there won't be any). So, you must use the post_status='publish' along with the 'date_after' attribute. like this: [the_future_posts post_status="publish" date_after="now"]
Yes. Right out of the box. Uses WordPress' Permalink Settings whatever they may be.
Yes. Say goodbye to 'http://the-future-posts.local/?p=123'. Say hello to 'http://the-future-posts.local/my-category/sample-post/'.
Yes. A must have, otherwise WordPress returns a 404 error unless you are a logged Administrator.