Easily add tweetable pull quotes to your posts.
Author: | Jason Yingling (profile at wordpress.org) |
WordPress version required: | 3.0.1 |
WordPress version tested: | 5.0 |
Plugin version: | 1.2.2 |
Added to WordPress repository: | 12-02-2016 |
Last updated: | 26-10-2018
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, %: | 94 |
Rated by: | 3 |
Plugin URI: | http://jasonyingling.me |
Total downloads: | 3 720 |
Active installs: | 100+ |
Click to start download
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Screenshots
The Easy Pull Quotes button is added to the Post Editor upon installation.
After clicking the Easy Pull Quotes button you'll get a nice popup to enter your quote.
The various layouts of Easy Pull Quotes.
FAQ
How do I add a pull quote?
Just select the Easy Pull Quotes button on the post editor. Insert some text. Select your alignment. Press ok.
But what if I want to be difficult and not do that?
Well you could manually enter the shortcode. It takes 1 attribute ‘align’ which can take 1 of 3 arguments ‘align-left’, ‘align-right’, and, you guessed it, ‘align-center’.
[epq-quote align="align-right"]Bleep bloop blorp[/epq-quote]
Can I edit the styles of the pull quote?
Sure! You’ll just have to use CSS. Right now the class .epq-pull-quote-default
contains the styling for the pull quote. If you want to edit the Twitter icon that can be done with .epq-twitter
. But be warned the icon is using the proper Twitter brand standard colors.
Anything else I need to know?
Not really. The plugin is pretty simple.
ChangeLog
1.2.2
- Fixing a bug with urlencoding caused by WordPress encoding HTML entities
in the editor. Example, & would be encoded as & in the editor then encoded
as %26amp%3B in the Twitter url insteald of just %26.
1.2.1
- Better encoding for characters used in Twitter urls
1.1
- Switching twitter.com/widgets.js to only load when Easy Pull Quotes is used in a post
1.0