Hi Eylul,

Thanks for the detailed explanation. Well yes, those restriction sounds limiting, as we cannot freely utilize helpful plugins, but yes we understand the reason. So as long as the theme doesn't depend on plugins it should be fine then, right. Which means all content management related things need to be done in a WordPress standard way (done in dashboard admin, and without touching theme source code).

Agree with your idea, we can define & isolate editable area into custom fields (or theme customizer) to make it easy & quick to update.

Also, we can utilize custom templates & widgets to handle several different layout scenarios, including providing a blank page template to allow adding own hand-coded HTML & CSS when it really necessary.

And the good things, the latest version of WP (ver 5) has built-in block editor (Gutenberg).
That will make editing complex layout easier.
(You keep updating Wordpress to the latest version, right?)

> I hope this is helpful and not too demoralizing. :)
All good, We are still excited 🙂

So we are waiting for the decision, whether it ok to go ahead and continue.

Thank you,
Shinta

On 4/15/2019 9:54 PM, eylul wrote:
Hi again!
Yes, we are able to build the Wordpress theme/coding side, as well as
design side, with supervision and assistance from you/ubuntu studio team.
However, what you've mentioned in previous site/theme development
workflow sounds limiting.
Are we still restricted with the same constraint today?

As far as I know we any change we make to the theme needs to go through
IS submission procedure, so the requirement to be ability to change any
content (and ideally any images that might require changing) without
touching the theme remains. Making the theme easily editable is not a
solution unfortunately. Any theme needs to account for the fact that any
change to the website content/updates will be done via wordpress
structures. Just to note that, we also didn't have a lot of luck with
acceptance of plugins that gives access to css overrides or drag and
drop etc. Probably the best solution is to have custom fields on the
theme to fill out parts of the front page. (e.g. download link,
description, 6 software examples). Another approach obviously is to have
the css and layout inside the front page content, which is more than a
little hacky.

Anyhow now you begin to see why we sometimes went with more conservative
approaches.


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