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user350895
9:26 AM
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Good morning, can you tell me please query string to disable Autoptimize CSS/JS aggregation? I need it for debugging. I saw it before, but now I can’t find. I want to enter _site.com/?nooptimize (something like this). Thanks in advance for help
 
11:31 AM
@spoilt I strongly recommend not using Autoptimize
it ruins your time to first byte, and eliminates any progressive rendering on the browser end
there's no point optimising things so the browser can render things as they arrive, then saving it all up and sending it all at once after the browser has stood around waiting
Tools like Autoptimize are mostly good for ticking boxes on google page speed
they're no substitute for actually fixing the things page speed reported
 
 
11 hours later…
10:17 PM
posted on October 27, 2020 by Josepha

WordPress 5.6 beta 2 is now available for testing! This software is still in development, so we recommend that you run this version on a test site. You can test the WordPress 5.6 beta in two ways: Try the WordPress Beta Tester plugin (choose the “bleeding edge nightlies” option). Or download the beta here (zip). WordPress 5.6 is slated for […]

 
10:41 PM
So, I've struggled for a long time trying to organize my WP plugins properly. On my latest try I've decided to split my functionality into Classes, Controllers, and Models. Where Classes are general functionality, Controllers manage hooks, and Models manage type specific data along with helper methods.
As a general Model I have my Database Model which handles CRUD. All other Models pretty much extend the Database Model. Right now my CRUD is pretty basic and for the most part that's fine.
100% of my Models have custom tables but only 10% have additional relation tables. Now I'm trying to decide if I should add in some kind of conditional relational logic to my Database Model or build in CRUD overrides into my type specific Model to handle the relational tables.
Any ideas or suggestions on this?
 
11:06 PM
posted on October 27, 2020 by Andrea Middleton

The 2020 WordPress survey is open! Take the survey to share your WordPress experience with those who build the software. Also, the 2019 survey results are now available - check them out!

 

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