Description
Debug Bar Taxonomies adds a new panel to the Debug Bar that displays detailed information about the registered taxonomies for your site.
Important
This plugin requires the Debug Bar plugin to be installed and activated.
Also note that this plugin should be used solely for debugging and/or in a development environment and is not intended for use on a production site.
If you like this plugin, please rate and/or review it. If you have ideas on how to make the plugin even better or if you have found any bugs, please report these in the Support Forum or in the GitHub repository.
Screenshots
Installation
- Install Debug Bar if not already installed (https://wordpress.org/plugins/debug-bar/)
- Extract the .zip file for this plugin and upload its contents to the
/wp-content/plugins/
directory. Alternatively, you can install directly from the Plugin directory within your WordPress Install. - Activate the plugin through the “Plugins” menu in WordPress.
FAQ
- Installation Instructions
-
- Install Debug Bar if not already installed (https://wordpress.org/plugins/debug-bar/)
- Extract the .zip file for this plugin and upload its contents to the
/wp-content/plugins/
directory. Alternatively, you can install directly from the Plugin directory within your WordPress Install. - Activate the plugin through the “Plugins” menu in WordPress.
- Can it be used on live site ?
-
This plugin is only meant to be used for development purposes, but shouldn’t cause any issues if run on a production site.
- What are taxonomies ?
-
Basically, a taxonomy is a way to group things together. […] In WordPress, a “taxonomy” is a grouping mechanism for some posts (or links or custom post types).
The names for the different groupings in a taxonomy are called terms. […] As an example from WordPress, a category or tag is a term.Since WordPress 2.3, you’ve been able to create your own custom taxonomies, but these have been a rarely used feature of WordPress until Version 2.9. In truth, they are an extremely powerful way to group various items in all sorts of ways.
- Why won’t the plugin activate ?
-
Have you read what it says in the beautifully red bar at the top of your plugins page ? As it says there, the Debug Bar plugin needs to be active for this plugin to work. If the Debug Bar plugin is not active, this plugin will automatically de-activate itself.
Reviews
There are no reviews for this plugin.
Contributors and Developers
“Debug Bar Taxonomies” is open source software. The following people have contributed to this plugin.
Contributors“Debug Bar Taxonomies” has been translated into 2 locales. Thank you to the translators for their contributions.
Translate “Debug Bar Taxonomies” into your language.
Interested in development?
Browse the code, check out the SVN repository, or subscribe to the development log by RSS.
Change Log
2.0.0
Release date: 2018-01-22
- Improved compatibility with PHP 7.2.
- Updated the pretty print dependency to v1.8.0.
- Refactoring of part of the code base. No functional changes.
- General housekeeping.
- Added minimum PHP requirement header. (PHP 5.2.4, in line with WP itself.)
- Tested & found compatible WP 4.9.
1.1
Release date: 2017-07-10
- Improved usability of the admin notice in case the Debug Bar plugin is not active.
- The plugin will now add itself to the list of “recently active” plugins if it self-deactivates bcause the Debug Bar plugin is not active.
- Defer to just in time loading of translations for WP > 4.5.
- Updated the pretty print dependency to v1.7.0.
- Minor housekeeping.
- The minimum supported WP version is now 3.4, in line with the 0.9 version of the Debug Bar.
- Tested & found compatible WP 4.8.
1.0
Release date: 2016-04-27
- Initial release