

There's a lot of crossover there then with our code and design. It's easier than pulling over to React Native. We've incorporated it, as well as, where we've found it has real true possibilities are the Gutenberg blocks and using ReactDOM. Maybe we wanted them to use Gutenberg in their post, but we were going to use page builder for the other pages, things like that. Even if we were using a page builder, we still embraced Gutenberg for certain aspects of it. I had no desire to back to classic editor like I saw a lot of people were doing. And so coming in with fresh eyes, we saw the potential of Gutenberg. Well, accepted by some, right? But definitely for us, because we were coming in with fresh eyes. And obviously, by that time, Gutenberg was the accepted editor. Since then, for the last couple of years, we've been digging in much deeper into doing application development in WordPress.
#WORDPRESS 5.9 DOWNLOAD FULL#
We did certain sites for clients that requested them, but we didn't do our full website application building and everything inside of WordPress at the time, we were more Joomla based. Robbie: For me, I mean, I worked on WordPress years and years ago before Gutenberg, right? But I would call it minimal work. Ronald: If I can go to Robbie, because you've experienced it maybe in a slightly different way, and it was presented to you a few years back. There's a central path, but it has to adapt with that. But really, there is always going to be adaption as the languages that we use, the technologies adapt, the way that we use technology changes, the way that we create content has changed, and what we want to do has changed. So there is always going to be a roadmap that it was planned to be on because that's just the way it's going, the phases. It has to adapt with the needs of the marketplace as well. So there's an element of that, that has to adapt. So what we can do now, we maybe hoped you could do at the beginning, but we couldn't quite do it at the beginning because technology couldn't catch up to do at the beginning. Because any project that spans a number of years will change, because technology changes. Tammie: I think the thing about it is it's a project that has to adapt and has to grow. How do you think where we are now, are we still at the beginning phases of what the full capabilities potentially can be? And you've lived and breathed the whole process. Ronald: You were right there from the beginning, from the birth of Gutenberg, as the design lead. I think anyone that's been using WordPress for the past few years is used to it, just both by the fact that they are used to using WordPress. And then there's another discussion that we can maybe have today about the scale of what full site editing is. I think, as regards to the full site editing aspect, that is completely different thing to talk about where we're getting used to or not. So I think people have got used to it because it is in WordPress, and it is there, and it's part of what's being used. Tammie: I think, Gutenberg is WordPress, so I think it's very interesting when people talk about Gutenberg, it'll be experimental plugin. Now, I'm going to ask Tammie, first of all, have we got used to it? Are people embracing it, or are we still in a period where people are unsure about it? Embracing or uncertainty with Gutenberg We're right in it, we've all had to get used to it. So full site editing, Gutenberg blocks, all these terms that maybe three, four years ago are all a bit scary and silly. Ronald: Welcome to another episode of Do the Woo, and this time we're going to talk about full site editing and the recent release of WordPress 5.9.
