This content is before the more tag. Right after this sentence should be a “continue reading” button of some sort.
Read moreTemplate: Excerpt (Defined)
This is a user-defined post excerpt. It should be displayed in place of the post content in archive-index pages.
Read moreTemplate: Excerpt (Generated)
This is the post content. It should be displayed in place of the auto-generated excerpt in single-page views. Archive-index pages should display an auto-generated excerpt of this content. Depending on Theme-defined filters, the length of the auto-generated excerpt will vary from Theme-to-Theme. The default length for auto-generated excerpts is 55 words, so to test the […]
Read moreTemplate: Paginated
Post Page 1
Read moreTemplate: Sticky
This is a sticky post. There are a few things to verify: The sticky post should be distinctly recognizable in some way in comparison to normal posts. You can style the .sticky class if you are using the post_class() function to generate your post classes, which is a best practice. They should show at the […]
Read moreProtected: Template: Password Protected (the password is “enter”)
There is no excerpt because this is a protected post.
Read moreTemplate: Comments
This post tests comments in the following ways. Threaded comments up to 10 levels deep Paginated comments (set Settings > Discussion > Break comments into pages to 5 top level comments per page) Comment markup / formatting Comment images Comment videos Author comments Gravatars and default fallbacks
Read moreTemplate: Comments Disabled
This post has its comments, pingbacks, and trackbacks disabled. There should be no comment reply form, but should display pingbacks and trackbacks.
Read moreTemplate: Pingbacks And Trackbacks
This post has many pingpacks and trackbacks. There are a few ways to list them. Above the comments Below the comments Included within the normal flow of comments
Read moreMedia: Twitter Embeds
Really cool to read through and find so much awesomeness added to WordPress 3.6 while I was gone. I should take three weeks off more often. — Andrew Nacin (@nacin) April 3, 2013 This post tests WordPress’ Twitter Embeds feature.
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