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Coda 2 tutorial
Coda 2 tutorial












coda 2 tutorial
  1. #Coda 2 tutorial how to
  2. #Coda 2 tutorial password

When the message disappear, click on the little “Home” icon in Coda 2 sidebar, then click on “SCM” (this icon should have a little bullet with the number of files of your plugins). That means that Coda is trying to find the differences between the local directory and the online directory. You’ll notice on the bottom left of the page a little message appears: “Activity” > “Refreshing Status for …”. Once it’s done double click on your new Coda site. Don’t forget to add a readme.txt file (more information on Pippin Williamson website by David Decker). You can now copy all the files of your plugin folder under “trunk”. These news folders came directly from the WordPress repo. Go now to the local directory you previously created at step 3.4 you’ll see that there are now some new directories: branches, tags, and trunk. When the message disappear, the transfer is complete and you can click on “Save”.

coda 2 tutorial

There’s now a message that says that the transfer is being done…

#Coda 2 tutorial password

Enter your nickname and your password (it’s your WordPress account data).Paste the SVN url you received in the WordPress email in the “Repository URL” field.Fill in the local root path (for the moment target to an empty directory).Fill in the nickname (it’s your plugin name).Go to “Sites” section under main menu “View” or press Cmd + 1.Here are the steps to configure Coda 2 in order to publish your plugin to the repository: Note: Since OS X Mountain Lion, you have to manually setup Subersion The 1st email from WordPress you receive it should look like this one:

coda 2 tutorial

Those emails can take until 24H to arrive. You now have to wait that WordPress send you two emails, the first once to tell you that the plugin request is accepted, the second one (about an hour later) with your SVN access. That means that WordPress took into consideration your request with success. Once it’s done click on “Send Post”, and after page refreshment you’ll see this message: Here’s what i inserted for Easy GitHub Gist Shortcodes: Note that the URL does not need to be valid for now, but i encourage you to create the page before and to keep this URL as the main plugin page (where you can describe it, add links to the support or whatever). You have to fill in the form, enter your plugin name, describe it in a few lines, and add the plugin URL. All you have to do is to go on this page: Add your plugin to the WordPress repository (please note that you need an account. The first step is simple and is common to any available methods to publish a plugin to the repo: you have to tell WordPress that you want to add your new plugin to the repo so that an access got created for you in order to store the files on WordPress servers. But with Coda 2 it’s a pleasure! Let’s see that! That’s the main main reason why i haven’t published many of many plugins, because SVN was a huge waste of time for me. Maybe you already tried to publish a WordPress plugin using and SVN (with Versions, SVNx, or with the Terminal) on your Mac? I did… and i found it pretty complex and not fun at all.

#Coda 2 tutorial how to

So today it’s time to see how to publish the plugin to the official WordPress Plugins Repository using the new version of Coda from Panic Inc.

coda 2 tutorial

Last week, we saw how to create a really simple WordPress plugin allowing GitHub Gist insertion into shortcodes.














Coda 2 tutorial