While BuddyPress, Ultimate Member, Profile Builder and similar plugins are excellent, we wanted to create something much lighter and simpler to use. Something that could be gentle on your server resources. All the above elements can be added to your website via Gutenberg Blocks, Widgeets that can be used with most page builders or Shortcodes. After activation all pages are created with the correct shortcodes so that you are good to go in seconds.
You can customize the design of both the Users Directory and the User Profile templates using your favorite page builder. For example, you can decide where any element of the user profile appears. Elements like: the Avatar, the header banner, the name and all custom fields you created. You can chose if you want to hide any section of it and where to show the custom fields. In a sidebar or in their own tab.
Or you can redesign the template completely just like you modify any WordPress page. Using shortcodes, blocks or widgets, through the classic editor, Gutenberg or any page builder. UsersWP can be extended with several add-ons.
There are many others and we release new Add-ons frequently. Should you find any bug, please report it in the support forum and we will fix it asap! Automatic installation is the easiest option. UsersWP installation. The manual installation method involves downloading UsersWP and uploading it to your webserver via your favourite FTP application.
The WordPress codex will tell you more here. Automatic updates should seamlessly work. We always suggest you backup up your website before performing any automated update to avoid unforeseen problems.
Most of the time it is caused when a script exhausts PHP memory limit. It can also happen due to a configuration on the server. It is also possible that a user would only see white screen of death on certain sections of their site.
The symptoms of this error is that when a user visits a single post on their site they get a page — not found error. The user can browse all other sections of their site including the admin area. The most common cause of this issue is permalink settings in WordPress.
To solve this issue a user would need to reconfigure their permalinks settings or manually update their rewrite rules. Another common issue beginners face is when the sidebar appears below the content when it is supposed to appear next to the content. This issue is mostly caused by WordPress themes. Sometimes when users are adding code snippets to their site, they may accidentally forget to close an html div tag or add an extra closing div which may result into breaking the theme layout.
Another common cause is using disproportionate width in CSS or not clearing float properly. This problem may occur when concatenated JavaScript is not working. This error occurs when a WordPress script or a plugin exhausts the default allocated memory size limit. Sometimes you may find yourself locked out of the WordPress admin area. A plugin or code that incorrectly tries to make some changes into admin section can also lock you out. You may also lose access to admin area due to a hacked WordPress site.
Symptoms of this issue are that when a user attempts to login to the WordPress dashboard, they are redirected by WordPress back to the login page. Most of the time it happens due to incorrect values for site url and home url fields in WordPress options table. It can also be caused by poorly configured permalink settings or redirects setup in the.
Sometimes a user would suddenly notice that all the images from their site are gone and are showing broken image placeholders. When the user tries to upload an image to a post using the media uploader, it results into an error.
All these files in the media library will appear as broken. This error occurs due to incorrect file and directory permissions in a WordPress installation. A number of factors may cause this issue. Uploading images to a WordPress site can be confusing for someone new to WordPress. A user may be unable to find out how to align images, resize or crop them, or display them in a gallery format.
This is not an error or issue in WordPress. You just need to familiarize yourself with how WordPress handles media. Users may come across this error in WordPress admin area. The most common cause of this error is a plugin or theme failing to use Nonce properly. Nonce are special security keys which may be appended to URLs when performing an admin action in WordPress.
Sometimes a plugin or theme may use it incorrectly which may result into users seeing this error. What happens there is that WordPress puts your site in maintenance mode during an update. If for some reason the update is interrupted, then WordPress does not get the chance to put your site out of the maintenance mode.
This error would lock down your entire site and make it unavailable for admins as well as visitors. The most common symptom of this problem is not receiving any contact form or WordPress notification emails from your site. This issue is usually caused because most shared hosting providers disable or limit the module used for sending emails to prevent their servers from abuse.
Depending on what browser you are using, your RSS feed error message may vary. You can also see this error message when visiting your feed in a browser. A missing line break or an extra tab can break your RSS feed. This is why the error is usually accompanied by the text:. Additionally, a Forbidden error was encountered while trying to use an ErrorDocument to handle the request.
There are different scenarios when you can see this error. Incorrect file permissions, poorly coded security plugins, or server configuration are the most common culprits. This error usually occurs due to a misconfigured redirection issue. Several other popular WordPress plugins also use the redirect functionality as well.
Due to a misconfiguration in any of these redirection tools, your site may end up redirecting users to a URL that is actually redirecting them back to the referring URL. This error can occur due to a number of reasons. However, the most common one is incorrect folder permissions. Each file and folder on your website has a set of permissions.
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