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Introduction to theme.json - Tutorial #519
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@wparasae are you also working on this? |
Removing myself from this issue temporarily. I'm doing a big push to finish what I've already started as I gear up for the future course; other people may work on this if they desire. Otherwise, I will likely pick this back up as part of the larger "Build a Block Theme - Low Code" course. |
It is more relevant to be in the Ready to create column as Sarah is not working on it. SO anyone else if want, they can pick it. |
outline support was also added to blocks and elements via theme.json. For more information about overall changes to theme.json, please see the Expanded theme.json support and Styles options section below. Code examples: view examples provided in the Styling elements in block themes dev note Adoption approach: opt-in. Key Make Posts/GitHub/Trac Issue(s): Styling elements in block themes dev note. |
As I've spent the last 6 months getting ramped up on block themes and theme.json, I'd like to take a stab at this. However, theme.json is a BIG topic, there's so much to cover. So I'd suggest we pare this video down to an Introduction to theme.json, covering the following:
And then include extensive references back to documentation for further reading. |
theme.json.mp4Tutorial ready for review |
Review: Excellent work, Jonathan! Great examples were used. I could easily follow all the steps. 🎆 0:14 - 1:30 Check the recording at 1:23 :-) |
Your tone is so friendly! I love how clearly you're coming into your voice while making these, Jonathan. You've managed to take one of the most complex topics in WordPress right now and condense it into eleven minutes. I cannot overstate how impressive that is. Well done! You've answered questions that lingered in the back of my mind about this, and now I understand how they work in a big way. Do you mind if I add this into the "Create Your First Block Theme" course as a supplemental material? Seriously, this is glorious! Ellaborating on Wes' suggestions:
The amount of work and effort you put into making this a clear and useable tutorial is second-to-none, Jonathan. Truly. Thank you for the detailed thought you've put into this! |
Side note, after reading through these comments again, I've come to realize that I tend to have a need to "tell" rather than "show" at the start of my tutorials, which is largely useless in a visual format. So going forward, instead of having an "introduction" slide that dumps up a bunch of info, I'm going to take the content of that slide, and split it out into the different sections of the tutorial. |
A thought: This is very much in the style of speeches and essays: Tell your audience what you're going to tell them (intro slides!), tell them what you promised you'd tell them (screencasts!), then tell them what you told them (sum it all up!)! It can definitely be a valuable way to help learners retain knowledge (repetition is important!) Rather than tossing out your way of doing videos, you might consider keeping your front-loading information style, but adding a few more screencasts as you go -- consider them "teasers" of what they'll learn in the video, perhaps? Like movie previews! :) |
I don't disagree with this, however, I think the biggest hurdle here is time, if I did all that, my tutorials might end up being too long? 🤔 Don't stop giving me feedback though, it helps me refine and improve. 😄 |
Workshop is submitted through https://learn.wordpress.org/workshop-presenter-application/
CHECKLIST: Workshop Development Checklist
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