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Whether you’re a budding blogger or seasoned Web designer, WordPress is a brilliant tool for creating websites, once you know how to tap its impressive features. The latest edition of this jargon-free Missing Manual shows you how to use WordPress 3.9’s themes, widgets, plug-ins, and souped-up editing and multimedia tools to build just about any kind of site. The important stuff you need to know: Create your site. Get hands-on, A-to-Z instructions for building all types of websites, from classy blogs to professional-looking ecommerce sites. Add features. Choose from thousands of widgets and plug-ins to enhance your site’s ease of use, looks, and performance. Mix in multimedia. Add picture galleries, slideshows, video clips, music players, and podcasts to your pages. Attract an audience. Create automatic content feeds, sign up site subscribers, and help readers share your posts on social media. Fine-tune your content. Analyze site statistics to improve your content and reach, and to optimize your site for search engines. Go Mobile. Choose a theme that automatically reconfigures your site for mobile devices. Build a truly unique site. Learn how to customize WordPress themes to create a site that looks exactly the way you want it to. Review: Its a really great book, however if you have some experience building ... - Its a really great book, however if you have some experience building web sites (like i do) you might want to skip it. Author assumes you don't even understand html or css. I read the whole book anyway and saved myself some time of clicking around wordpress dashboard, but i could have done that instead. I really liked the way author explains things, especially when he is talking a little bit about php at the end, i think it should be easy to understand for beginners. I read lots of web design and programming books and i can tell that M. MacDonald has a really good style of writing, he doesn't skip anything and makes everything clear and easy. So if you don't feel like exploring wordpress on your own and want to sit back and relax while learning i think you should get this book. Well not really, you still need to open your wordpress dashboard and explore as you read. Author also mentions a lot of useful links and websites that might be helpful in the future, i didn't know some of them but I'm glad i do now. Review: If You Want To Get Into WordPress - This Is Highly Recommended - My tendency to compare every Missing Manual and tech writer to David Pogue is probably the reason I can't give this a 5 star review, although a lot of thought, knowledge, skill and expertise went into this book. I bought Mac For Dummies in the mid-ninties back when I bough my first Power PC, and I'm sorry, MacDonald doesn't have that quick wit hat I've always enjoyed form Pogue. However, what "WordPress: The Missing Manual" lacks in entertainment value, it more than compensates fro in usefulness. And let me say this - if you are about to enter the world of WordPress, this is probably the best of the instructional references on the subject. I have spent hours in a Barnes and Noble brick & mortar store poring through other WordPress books and this is the most complete and up to date book I could find. There are other more advanced WordPress books - some that delve more deeply into niches (such as blogger or website specific or business and marketing specific). But this covers a WHOLE LOT of ground and you can be a total newbie and/or a reasonably advanced user and still find this a useful reference to keep handy in your library or by the computer workstation. As with all the other "Missing Manual" series books, there is a "Missing CD" website where you can find links to toehr resources and files referred to in the book as well as updates to the content.































































| Best Sellers Rank | #2,709,128 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #123 in User Generated Content (Books) #181 in Content Management #216 in Blogging & Blogs |
| Customer Reviews | 4.3 out of 5 stars 167 Reviews |
E**A
Its a really great book, however if you have some experience building ...
Its a really great book, however if you have some experience building web sites (like i do) you might want to skip it. Author assumes you don't even understand html or css. I read the whole book anyway and saved myself some time of clicking around wordpress dashboard, but i could have done that instead. I really liked the way author explains things, especially when he is talking a little bit about php at the end, i think it should be easy to understand for beginners. I read lots of web design and programming books and i can tell that M. MacDonald has a really good style of writing, he doesn't skip anything and makes everything clear and easy. So if you don't feel like exploring wordpress on your own and want to sit back and relax while learning i think you should get this book. Well not really, you still need to open your wordpress dashboard and explore as you read. Author also mentions a lot of useful links and websites that might be helpful in the future, i didn't know some of them but I'm glad i do now.
H**N
If You Want To Get Into WordPress - This Is Highly Recommended
My tendency to compare every Missing Manual and tech writer to David Pogue is probably the reason I can't give this a 5 star review, although a lot of thought, knowledge, skill and expertise went into this book. I bought Mac For Dummies in the mid-ninties back when I bough my first Power PC, and I'm sorry, MacDonald doesn't have that quick wit hat I've always enjoyed form Pogue. However, what "WordPress: The Missing Manual" lacks in entertainment value, it more than compensates fro in usefulness. And let me say this - if you are about to enter the world of WordPress, this is probably the best of the instructional references on the subject. I have spent hours in a Barnes and Noble brick & mortar store poring through other WordPress books and this is the most complete and up to date book I could find. There are other more advanced WordPress books - some that delve more deeply into niches (such as blogger or website specific or business and marketing specific). But this covers a WHOLE LOT of ground and you can be a total newbie and/or a reasonably advanced user and still find this a useful reference to keep handy in your library or by the computer workstation. As with all the other "Missing Manual" series books, there is a "Missing CD" website where you can find links to toehr resources and files referred to in the book as well as updates to the content.
D**N
Great for newbies through intermediate
An excellent, up-to-date introduction to WordPress. Good for beginners who have little or no experience with website creation, as well as for those with some familiarity with HTML, CSS and PHP (the basic building blocks of WordPress). Even at almost 600 pages, it can't cover everything, but MacDonald provides plenty of links to more info on the web (including the "missing CD" with links organized by chapter). One area the book ignores is the idea of setting up a local development environment on your own computer, rather than on a live, publicly-viewable site. While it's fine not to tackle that in detail in a beginner-friendly book, some basic guidance for readers and some links would have been a good idea. I've read the book from start to finish, and am combining it with an online video training course. In sum, a very well-written, well-organized learning tool, to take you from newbie up to at least an intermediate level.
M**K
Good for beginner
This is a decent book if you want to learn WordPress. It is rather large (~600 pages) and if you need a very slow, take you by the hand, introduction how to do things, this is for you. If you are computer-savvy and grasp concepts quickly, this is not for you, because it is tediously slow and wordy. It depends on your perspective: beginner and not familiar with web sites? The book is for you. Advanced, but just want to know the bottom line? Not so much for you. Also, if you *really* need the step-by-step approach, you may want to see if a new edition will come out soon. I discovered a few functions that don't work anymore as described in the book. WordPress changes continuously (and it should) and the book is, well, static.
P**N
Well written and well organized; meets my needs.
I am a "reluctant" webmaster, sucked into the role for our non-profit website. On my own, I've learned enough to add new features to our site, search for and replace a tiny bit of code, etc. This book meets my needs. Much of the early chapters is a 'review' for me, but that's okay because it verifies I do know what I think I know. I have about 8 post-its marking the little gems I found to help me do more on our website on my own. I bought this book to help expand my understanding of WP capabilities and intelligently work with a webmaster when needed. It's well written and well organized. Useful appendixes. Illustrations are numerous and support the text (although some screen grabs appear more grey than black and white). Highly useful.
W**A
it's easy to read too
They didn't lie - it really is the missing manual. I have learned so much and I'm not even one-third of the way through the book! Even if you skip a few pages here and there, there's so much information and so much you can learn. And, it's easy to read too. Clear explanations, diagrams, everything. This one is definitely worth the price. If you're doing WordPress, do yourself a favor and get the missing manual.
B**R
Just what I was looking for
I bought this book about a week ago, and since then I've given myself a bit of a WordPress intensive. I decided to buy it because I'd tried to start with WordPress by using various online resources, and I quickly discovered that it was way beyond me. Just to give you some idea, here are some of my early missteps: - I signed up for a wordpress.com account, then tried to install a theme (a friend had suggested one). I soon discovered that I couldn't, which left me completely confused. A bit of online research revealed that there's wordpress.com and wordpress.org and the two are quite different. A day wasted, and a frustrating waste of time. - I then went to wordpress.org and discovered an 'easy 5 minute install'. Great, I thought, I'm in the right place. So I started to do it and soon discovered I was out of my depth. Download the zip file, open it, go in and change a line of code, upload various files to your web server using ftp... again, completely bamboozling for someone who was hoping for a 'drag and drop' website creator. I happened then to be on an online forum and saw mention of 'softaculous'. I then went into my web host's cPanel (somewhat nervously) and discovered that you can actually install WordPress with ONE CLICK. Another day wasted. I share this because it will hopefully give you some sense of my level of experience. Not exactly an experienced developer, but also reasonably comfortable with searching online to find answers. I also share it because once I decided to actually buy this book, I discovered that the first chapter was about the distinction between wordpress.com and .org, and the second chapter was about how the 'easy 5 minute install' is actually quite difficult, and it's much easier to install it through cPanel using a one-click installer like Softaculous. In other words, what had taken me two frustrating days to discover, I could have learned in 10 minutes of reading. Since then I've burned through the book and I am now feeling very confident with the basics of WordPress. I saw some comments on the previous edition saying it focused too much on wordpress.com, but I would have to disagree. If anything, I was oblivious to wordpress.com throughout, and in general he simply says "this is how it works on wordpress.com, but on self-hosted wordpress.org sites, here's how it works". Regardless of the actual specific weighting either way, I found it provided me with all the information I needed to know. One comment I would have is that there was a plug-in mentioned that I tried to use, only to discover that it was no longer working for the latest version of WordPress (3.9.1 at time of writing). This was One Click Child Themes - so it would probably be worth having a site with the most up-to-date plug-ins. I tried using it and it didn't work, and it took a while to discover that it was only compatible up to WordPress 3.2.1. Another thing I couldn't see mentioned were tools like the Firebug extension for Firefox, or Chrome's Developer Tools, which reveal the CSS for web pages. Very useful. But overall this book was exactly what I was looking for, and my only regret was that I didn't buy it earlier. For $9.99 I've gone from a frustrated WordPress noob to a pretty confident WordPress user in under a week - although a fairly focused week - doing pretty much everything I need to do. If you're looking into WordPress, I'd recommend it. One thing I would say is that WordPress is NOT a basic drag-and-drop system like a Squarespace or Virb. (I've built sites with Squarespace and it's much easier for the everyday person). It helps a lot if you have some familiarity with html or css in particular, which is something I hadn't expected. It also comes with its own security issues, and you do need some familiarity with ftp and your web host. So while it's achievable, I wouldn't call it lay-down easy. I ended up buying Web Hosting for Dummies just to get my head around some of that stuff, and in combination the two books have been exactly what I needed.
S**N
This is Most Comprehensive WordPress Manual I Have Encountered so Far.
This is most comprehensive WordPress manual I have encountered so far. I am in the process of starting several blogs. I had checked out the 2012 edition from a local library and liked it so much that I ordered the 2nd edition from Amazon. (Note that one of my blogs will be on personal finance and frugal living, so I am rather discerning about actually buying a book rather than using the resources of a community library.) I would agree with other reviewers that this manual is more blog-centric and less about deploying WordPress for other types of sites. But for my purposes, it is a very useful reference.
J**T
Great Book though arrived with rear cover damage
Looks like a great and thorough book covering all necessary aspects. A bit disappointing that it arrived with rear cover damage. Packaging wasn’t damaged.
S**G
Great reference work for all Wordpress users
Perfect for the Wordpress novice and plenty of excellent, well explained practical information for those who want to tweak their site. Great value for money too. Highly recommended.
I**O
Ótima Referência
Uma ótima referência para dúvidas e como fazer dentro do mundo do Wordpress. Fácil leitura e com muitas informações. Tem minha indicação.
J**A
Five Stars
Like porn for a tech nerd
M**N
Useful Book For Anyone Learning WordPress
I bought this book because it was the required textbook for a WordPress course I took through the adult education department of a local college. I bought it through Amazon because Amazon's price was much lower that the price the college bookstore was asking. Overall, a useful book for anyone starting out using WordPress or wanting to learn more about using WordPress.
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