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Category: WordPress
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WPGraphQL v1.12.0 introduces new options for customizing how Post Types and Taxonomies are exposed to the WPGraphQL Schema. The goal of this post is to show how to use some of these options in action. You can read this post for an overview of all the options, or check out the release..
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WPGraphQL makes it easy to expose Custom Post Types and Taxonomies to the GraphQL Schema.
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I recently published a video walking through how End to End tests are set up for WPGraphQL, but I thought it would be good to publish a more direct step-to-step tutorial to help WordPress plugin developers set up End 2 End tests for their own WordPress plugins.
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One of the most common ways WordPress is used, is by users visiting a URL of a WordPress site and reading the content on the page.
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In this post, we’ll look at how we can create a simple Book Store using WordPress, WPGraphQL and Atlas Content Modeler, a new plugin from WP Engine that allows Custom Post Types, Custom Taxonomies and Custom Fields to be created in the WordPress dashboard and allows the data to be accessed from WPGraphQL.
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On February 28, The Matt Report podcast published the episode where Matt and I discussed WPGraphQL and WordPress.
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sna•fu noun a confused or chaotic state; a mess.
This past weekend I released v1.2.0 of WPGraphQL.
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In this article I want to dive into the current state of Gutenberg and WPGraphQL.
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This is a guest post by @nicolaisimonsen