Easily add a menu as a submenu to another menu.
Author: | Micah Wood (profile at wordpress.org) |
WordPress version required: | 3.2 |
WordPress version tested: | 4.7.28 |
Plugin version: | 1.1.2 |
Added to WordPress repository: | 01-05-2013 |
Last updated: | 24-01-2017
Warning! This plugin has not been updated in over 2 years. It may no longer be maintained or supported and may have compatibility issues when used with more recent versions of WordPress.
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Rating, %: | 0 |
Rated by: | 0 |
Plugin URI: | https://wpscholar.com/wordpress-plugins/mpres... |
Total downloads: | 2 134 |
Active installs: | 10+ |
Click to start download |
The mPress Menu Wormhole plugin allows you to easily add a menu as a submenu to another menu.
Why?
Let’s say you have a sidebar menu where you list a special collection of important pages on your site. Now let’s say you want those same items to appear in a submenu off of your main header navigation. Now you have to manage the same collection of pages in two places. The mPress Menu Wormhole plugin makes it easy to maintain a single menu and have the changes you make to the sidebar menu automatically take place in the header menu as well.
How?
Using this plugin is simple:
- Install the plugin.
- Activate the plugin.
- Go to ‘Appearance’ -> ‘Menus’ in the WordPress admin menu.
- You should see a box in the left column called ‘Navigation Menus’. If you don’t see it, check the FAQ page for what you need to do.
- Check box next to the menu you want to add and click the ‘Add to Menu’ button.
- Move the new item where you want and click the ‘Save Menu’ button.
IMPORTANT NOTE: Please don’t direct a wormhole into itself… it creates a black hole. In other words, don’t add a navigation menu to itself. It creates an infinite loop that will crash the front end of your site. No worries though, it is easily undone. I do it just for fun sometimes.
Features
- Clean, well written code that won’t bog down your site.
FAQ
ChangeLog