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NandoJourneymanMember
I'll be dammed. That did it.
To think of the major surgeries I've performed on other Genesis themes and this little thing got me. Chewing on my humble pie now. ;-D
Thanks a bunch, Landon.
NandoJourneymanMemberLandon, thanks for the reply. I'm familiar with the process with any other theme.
Let me try to explain myself better: I'd like to use the Genesis Theme as a child theme. Another way of saying that is I'd like my personal blog to look like the Genesis Theme, but I can't get the Genesis theme to behave like a child theme.
Will the Sample Theme achieve that? (The screenshot show an earlier version of Genesis)
NandoJourneymanMemberI'm going to have to echo the feeling here. This theme is built in an overtly complex way, with multiple CSS files scattered throughout the theme's folder structure, and unyielding features.
The shortcode vs. widgets issue is further aggravated by lack of documentation.
The brochure looked great, now I'm concerned about the future of this client's website I'm just wrapping up…NandoJourneymanMemberI wanted to keep the original formatting on most images, but also have the option to remove the formatting on some. So I created a CSS class I call no-border-image, and use it on the fly. I added this to child theme's CSS:
img.no-border-image {
border: none !important;
box-sizing: content-box !important;
padding: 0;
}Now, whenever I want an image without border, and the correct sizing, I add the class no-border-image. To do this, using the visual editor in WordPress, click on an image, click on the settings icon, go to "advanced", paste "no-border-image" (without the quotes) in the CSS Class field.
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