Difference between revisions of "WordPress Tweaks"

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Disabling unnecessary or unneeded functionality: https://design2seo.com/blog/web-development/wordpress/disabling-unused-wordpress-features/
Some potential gains by disabling unnecessary or unneeded functionality are addressed here: https://design2seo.com/blog/web-development/wordpress/disabling-unused-wordpress-features/<nowiki/>But use caution.  A plugin that provides a useful function may depend on a feature here.  Heartbeat is a good example of something a lot of plugins use behind the scenes.  It would be nice


Change the allowable image size put in an HTML SRCSET Attribute size (of course 16384 is a fairly large screen) setting into a Child Theme's functions.php file;<syntaxhighlight lang="text">
Change the allowable image size put in an HTML SRCSET Attribute size (of course 16384 is a fairly large screen) setting into a Child Theme's functions.php file;<syntaxhighlight lang="text">
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add_filter('max_srcset_image_width', 'new_srcset_max');
add_filter('max_srcset_image_width', 'new_srcset_max');
</syntaxhighlight>When WordPress creates "Thumbnails" (AKA Alternative Image Sizes (AIS(s)), the default quality compression is set to 85% (supposedly).  The below setting  in a Child Theme's functions.php file preserves 100% quality;<syntaxhighlight lang="text">
</syntaxhighlight>When WordPress creates "Thumbnails" (AKA Alternative Image Sizes (AIS(s)), the default quality compression is set to 85% (supposedly).  The below setting  in a Child Theme's functions.php file preserves 100% quality;<syntaxhighlight lang="text">
// Old Syntax
add_filter( 'jpeg_quality', create_function( '', 'return 100;' ) );
add_filter( 'jpeg_quality', create_function( '', 'return 100;' ) );
</syntaxhighlight>
 
OR
 
// New Syntax
function JPEG_Quality() {
return 100;
}
add_filter('jpeg_quality', 'JPEG_Quality');
</syntaxhighlight>The first method above seems to be deprecated as of PHP 7.2, so the 'modern' syntax is the second one.

Latest revision as of 08:52, 15 February 2022

Some potential gains by disabling unnecessary or unneeded functionality are addressed here: https://design2seo.com/blog/web-development/wordpress/disabling-unused-wordpress-features/But use caution. A plugin that provides a useful function may depend on a feature here. Heartbeat is a good example of something a lot of plugins use behind the scenes. It would be nice

Change the allowable image size put in an HTML SRCSET Attribute size (of course 16384 is a fairly large screen) setting into a Child Theme's functions.php file;

function new_srcset_max($max_width) {
    return 16384;
}

add_filter('max_srcset_image_width', 'new_srcset_max');

When WordPress creates "Thumbnails" (AKA Alternative Image Sizes (AIS(s)), the default quality compression is set to 85% (supposedly). The below setting in a Child Theme's functions.php file preserves 100% quality;

// Old Syntax
add_filter( 'jpeg_quality', create_function( '', 'return 100;' ) );

OR

// New Syntax
function JPEG_Quality() {
	return 100;
}
add_filter('jpeg_quality', 'JPEG_Quality');

The first method above seems to be deprecated as of PHP 7.2, so the 'modern' syntax is the second one.