Description
Tag Sticky Post allows you to mark a post to be displayed – or stuck – to the top of each archive page for the specified
tag.
Tag Sticky Post…
- Allows you to select which tag in which to stick a post
- Will display the post on the top of the first page of the archive just like WordPress’ sticky posts
- Will only allow you to stick a single post per tag
- Displays whether or not a post is stuck in a tag on the Post Edit dashboard
- Provides light styling that should look good in most themes
- Is available on each post editor page
- Is fully localized and ready for translation
- Includes a custom.css file so that you can style the plugin to look however you want
For more information or to follow the project, check out the project page.
Development Information
Tag Sticky Post was built with…
- The desire to perform the same functionality on my own blog
- WordPress Coding Standards
- Native WordPress API’s (specifically the Plugin API)
- CodeKit using LESS, JSLint, and jQuery
- Some advice from Konstantin Kovshenin on query optimization
- Respect for WordPress bloggers everywhere 🙂
Screenshots
Installation
Using The WordPress Dashboard
- Navigate to the ‘Add New’ Plugin Dashboard
- Select
tag-sticky-post.zip
from your computer - Upload
- Activate the plugin on the WordPress Plugin Dashboard
Using FTP
- Extract
tag-sticky-post.zip
to your computer - Upload the
tag-sticky-post
directory to yourwp-content/plugins
directory - Activate the plugin on the WordPress Plugins dashboard
Reviews
There are no reviews for this plugin.
Contributors & Developers
“Tag Sticky Post” is open source software. The following people have contributed to this plugin.
ContributorsTranslate “Tag Sticky Post” into your language.
Interested in development?
Browse the code, check out the SVN repository, or subscribe to the development log by RSS.
Change log
2.4.1
- Change plugin authorship.
2.4.0
- Changing plugin ownership
2.3.0
- WordPress 4.2.1 compatibility
2.2.0
- WordPress 4.1 compatibility
2.1.0
- WordPress 3.9 compatibility
2.0.0
- Implementing the singleton pattern
- Adding support for custom post types
- Adding a file to invoke an instance of the plugin
- WordPress 3.8 compatibility
1.2
- Introducing support for multiple tags in the querying string. So if your URL contains
tag/tag1+tag2+tag3
and a post is tagged in that set, it will be highlighted. - Added several private helper functions to impropve code readability
- Improved the meta data serialization process by refactoring the code
1.1.2
- Removing the custom.css support as it was causing issues with other plugin upgrades. Will be restored later, if requested.
1.1.1
- Improving support for adding custom.css so that the file is also managed properly during the plugin update process
- Updating localization files
1.1
- Updating function calls to use updated PHP conventions
- Adding a function to dynamically create a custom.css file if one doesn’t exist
- Verifying compatibility with WordPress 3.5
1.0
- Initial release