 Welcome everyone to today's session from Learn WordPress. This is a fun one we've got today. This is the story of the custom post type lost in a world of pages brought to us by Alicia St. Rose. And I am going to hand it off to her to get started. So let me stop on my screen share. Okay, great. Take it away, Alicia. I can tell you a little bit about myself. Oh my goodness. Hold on a minute. Alrighty, I think I'm going to have to try that again. I'm using stage manager on my Mac. And so sometimes it does really interesting things when I try to share. Okay, here we go. All right, can you see my my screen? Yes. Oh, awesome. So let's just say a little bit about myself. Beyond what I said in the beginning just a little intro. I am a storyteller, I like to tell stories. And I find that sometimes people get the gist of something technical when it's an actual story. And you can relate. And sometimes when we talk about technical things like custom post types and, and other the block editor and things like that in WordPress, people wrap their head around this technical aspect of it. But in my line of work is which is web development, the content and the strategy and the structure before you ever build anything is what's important. So with that said, that's why I'm actually doing a real story here. I mean, when I say, once upon a time, it's not something that I use casually I actually legitimately mean we're going to be starting a fairy tale about a custom post type. I also wanted to you as we're doing the story to see if you can recognize this story happening on your website. Somehow that would be interesting. And also, I'm going to apologize ahead of time for the legibility on the slides but you don't have to worry about that part because I'm almost verbatim going to be reading what's on there. So with that said, let's get started with the story of a custom post type lost in a world of pages. So, once upon a time there was a program page in a nonprofit organization WordPress site. This program page existed in a world of other pages, but often felt lonely and confused about page contact page mission page mission statement page and a host of other pages seem satisfied with their lot. They were playing content that was solid necessary and very unique, and they were happy to show up in certain places and just stay put. The program page felt it needed more self expression and long to connect with the other program pages it would occasionally see amongst the growing world of pages. The program page made the bold decision to look for something better. So it quietly slipped away. The program page wondered about for some days in the dashboard territory, not knowing where it would end up until one day on a strange and mysterious path, it encountered an unusual page. This page was joyfully moving around practically doing some results. What are you the program page asked the rotating dancing page replied me, I'm a post. What's a post. I provide the latest content and when I'm done another post takes my place. And it's there 15 minutes of fame, then I get to relax in the archive but the other posts. What about you. I'm a page, the program page said sheepishly. Oh well sometimes I get mistaken for a page. But I'm pretty adamant about being a post because I'm dynamic. I posted a while flip multiple times in depth, definitely landed on the ground. The program pages heart quickened dynamic. Yeah dynamic, I like to move around, see more of the site. I also do the loop. That's fun. I can do that anywhere. A lot of times I loop around on the homepage. I like to show off my authors and my birthday if I want to. And some posts don't like to let the world know how old they are and that's silly. How will they know if they're still relevant. Anyway, I also have this cool badge, this cool category badge so I can further distinguish myself. And the post proudly pointed to the star shaped badge. Wow. You sound super happy about being a post at the program page. What's not to love? What's your topic? Topic. You know. What are you about? I'm new director takes the helm. Oh, I'm a program page. I'm telling the world about my volunteer outreach. Hmm. If you were a post, then we'd have to give you a programs badge. I've seen a few posts wearing that badge. They mentioned programs once. But that info is long buried now unless it got some SEO love. We're really chummy with SEO bots because we're so dynamic. It's very hard to connect with each. Oh, I've seen other program pages like me lost in the world of pages. And it's very hard to connect with each other. And it sounds like the posts get to hang out together. Yeah, we do. We have a big blog world, a whole blog world. The program page grew excited and inspired. I'm going to go back to the pages world, find other program pages, and bring them back to during the blog world and get a program badge. Sure, exclaimed the post. We'd love to have you. The program page hurried back to the page world. And though it took an enormous amount of scrolling, it was able to locate most of the program pages and convince them to journey over to the blog world. A crowd of 20 program pages gathered outside the blog world. New director post had some deflating news. There are so many of you. There will have to be a lot of cutting and pasting, republishing, et cetera. Very time consuming. I'm sorry. The site administrator in the sky is not getting paid enough. All hopes seemed lost until a great elder post called Hello World stepped forward. Long ago before many of you were ever published, as elders migrated here from Weebly World. Tragically, we migrated into the pages world. A special magician called post type switcher plugin transformed us instantly into post. I will try to summon it now by connecting to the infinite repository. All pages and posts were silent. As Hello World post concentrated and exclaimed, calling post type switcher activate now. With a flash, post type switcher appeared, a bold PTS across its folder, and it glanced at the stunned group of program pages. So you guys need to get in here, right? It asked, motioning toward the blog world. Okie dokie. In another flash, all program pages became posts, and the new director posts quickly bestowed them with program badges. They instantly felt more alive and started dancing and looping. The looping gave them an advantage they never had as pages. They could connect more easily because they all had the program badge, so if the program post needed to appear anywhere on the site, together they could. The program posts were overjoyed and happily danced all over the site for a while. But soon it became apparent that being a post had its own share of issues. One program post stopped showing up with the others, somehow its badge only read uncategorized. So it got hopelessly lost amongst the blog world, which was growing faster than the pages world. Some program posts realized that while they were still program posts, they also were very different and were requesting a second badge to further distinguish themselves. Another program post was dealing with a common troll and couldn't understand why it had comments at all. The troll was making the program look bad and unprofessional. Seeing this issue, the volunteer outreach program posts continued to show up with the blog world. The blog world is not the perfect fit we were seeking. We are lost in other ways. It feels like a tango of spaghetti with the extra badges, and it's too easy to forget to give us our badges. We are not all looping and dancing together like we should, and comments seem unnecessary. Hello world responded. I was afraid of this. Sometimes pages migrate to blog world because they think the category badges will fix everything. But just adding a category to a post that was once a page really isn't enough. But what can we do now pleaded the program post? Well, perhaps the post type switcher plugin can help. Hello world once again summoned the post type switcher plugin, and in a flash it was activated. After listening intently to the issues the program posts were having, post type switcher remarked, we need another type of magician. You see, I can only move you to post types that already exist. You need your own post type, just for you and the other program posts. The volunteer outreach post group, the volunteer outreach posts were excited. You mean we can put our own program world on the dashboard map? Exactly. Wait a minute. Let me go back. Exactly. Let me summon one of the custom post type plugins. There are many, but my favorite is custom post type UI. A grand flash blinded the program. The program post for a moment, and there before it's an amazing site, a giant golden plugin with CPT UI emblazoned on its folder, a multitude of twinkling sparks radiating around it. You called, boom, the plugin. The speechless program posts finally uttered, yes, can you help me and the other program posts find our own world? The CPT UI taking note of the word post responded, got all hung up in the blog world, did ya? That's no place for a self-respecting program. Your content is too important to get buried in the blog archive. Can you help? Well, of course. I got sticky buttons. Sticky buttons. Oh, that's great. I said the relieved program. If you don't mind me asking, what are all those twinkling lights? That's my special magic. I'm shining light on a better way to organize the site and the dashboard territory. Each spark is a custom post type world being formed in a WordPress site. If you look closely, you can see what I'm making. The program post focused on the sparks and eventually could make out words in each one as it flashed. Words like services and events, products, team members, recipes, locations, portfolio items. The sparks were never ending as the list went on and on. Wow, exclaimed the program post. Well, there's no end to what can be a custom post type world, remarked CPT UI. CPT UI went on to explain, custom post types are dynamic and they loop. They dance around all over the site. They get badges just like post except they're called taxonomy. Custom post types can show up and loop together with the same taxonomy badge. They can have multiple badges or no badges and never get lost in their world. I will create a custom, I will create a program custom post type and you and the other programs will have your own program world. The program post was incredulous. Really? There are more perks to being a custom post type. You automatically get your own program archive just like the blog world. Every time a program is added, it gets added to this archive. It's easier for the site administrator in the sky to find you all since you'll be gathered together in one place in the dashboard territory. Finally, CPT UI said, I think it's time to create program world. A new spark began to form and suddenly the word programs glowed with a brilliant light. The program world appeared in the dashboard territory. After post type switcher transformed the program post into true program custom post types, the programs gathered and entered their world. It was just as CPT UI had said, but there were even more pleasant surprises. For instance, when the programs got added to the main menu and all the site administrator in the sky had to do was link to an archive of already listed programs instead of building a page and how easy it was to loop programs in the query block anywhere on the website. Because program world was such a hit, staff world was formed. With the help of another magician, advanced custom fields, specific programs could be connected to staff members who ran them. So a staff member custom post type proudly displayed looping programs on its single view and the program custom post type could share the love and loop the connected staff member on its single view. Before long, more worlds popped up in the nonprofit organization WordPress sites dashboard territory. Resource world, case studies world, board members world and others gave the site the ability to loop important information whenever and wherever needed quickly and easily, thus creating a richer user experience. And the brave volunteer outreach program who started it all it danced and looped throughout the site and the volunteer numbers shot up astronomically. Oh my gosh, the end was skipped. Is actually just the beginning because it's time to free your custom post types from the world of pages. Someone's clapping. Gene is clapping. I just want to know people you can come clean. Where are what are they in your pages if you y'all if you everyone wants to like if you have questions that's fine too. But also if you if you want to be honest and say that you do have like maybe too many pages and something some worlds need to be created. I have a comment from John certified fresh 100% rotten tomatoes. This is on the edge of my seat the whole time. You guys are great I love you. I will I feel like I have to pass the favor out. Because no one should have to sit through a boring tech talk. I just can't be the person. Yeah, this is the first time I think that we've ever had a story time as one of our sessions so it's great. There was also plenty of time to because I didn't want to just be a story and you wonder off because a lot of things were mentioned in there the three plugins that I was talking about. Maybe we can go into details about, you know, when do you need to know you need a custom post type. You know, and that would be before you make the website. Jean has a question. So I'm making my screen. Oh yeah, go ahead and okay okay okay okay. We'll go into some questions so Jean asks, or says, I'm making a page with links to forms. Each form is on its own page. Would this be a candidate for posts. Yeah, custom post type yes I've done it already. I do it in a festival website. So the advantage of having a custom post type is that I'm going to be open and transparent. For years they were pages, and then I would always have to go digging through the pages to find them. So then just this year or maybe this last year I think it might have been just this year I decided, well I'm going to make a custom post type and I'm going to embed the formidable form on each one of those. And so now when I go into the dashboard, I just go over to applications or that that's what I named my custom post type, and I go there and they're all just listed they're just listed and I don't miss one and it's the wrong date on it and stuff you know what I mean. That's why that's that world of pages that your forms are lost. They need to go on the journey but they can skip the blog part. That's why I put that in the story most people head over there. Mm hmm. Yes. Any other questions. Yeah geniuses thank you. And one more comment from Miguel I have to pass this talk over to my students when this is on WordPress TV epic and very explanatory. Yeah, I mean, I feel like there's like essence to all the things that WordPress can do. And when it gets to esoteric people don't understand that they can grasp it so easy and then they can do the technical stuff later, because what needs to happen when you're planning a website or even if you get inherited if you inherit a website is that there's a strategy. This the most important thing that's the difference between a hot mess and a really efficient workable user friendly website. So a lot of this stuff would have happened when you sat down with your team, or you sat down before you made your website and you asked yourself about your own business, and you said well what I have services. So there's more than one. That's like already a post type. And when you realize that when you're making a post type you're now making an object that can move around and can have arguments in a loop. So now we're going to go a little technical, but now you understand where we're going from. So when you do that loop that the post is doing that's the original looper, but your custom post type does it too. There are arguments that you can put a whole bunch of them. And sometimes when you use something like generate blocks and the query loop block and you see all these weird things are asking you to choose. Those are the arguments that you would have written in code, like what taxonomy are we going to show, or how many posts are we going to show, or what the like the date on some of them are we going to alphabetize them, you know, things like that. And so when you make a custom post type, it takes more of the dynamic nature of a post than a page. A page is something that's almost like a statue of the old days. Okay, it's never supposed to move. It's all contact can be floating around and be at the top that at the bottom next week, you know what I mean it's going to be there there there. So if you have pages like your mission statement, or about, and things like that, then you want to make that a page, but then all of a sudden and now you're starting with we got the president, and then we have the secretary, and then we have. There is an urge to make pages for them but isn't that the people who work there, like the team. So now you got to think beyond. And so now what you will do is you'll make a team, and what their job position is is a category or taxonomy. So you're able to do that kind of thing with custom post types like give groupings to stop you can't do that with pages and gets really rough gets rough after a while with thousands of pages. Yeah, I could get to that point. Any points strategy and maximizing the possibilities of WordPress structure features. And thank you. Do we have any other questions, comments, anything about testing post types that we could. Yeah, does anybody want to see anything like we've got time because I can yeah we have some time I can probably spend open spin up my local or something. Yeah. If we want. Let me go and get, let me see we got only available with a plugin asked Robert. Wait which one. Robert asks, is it only available with a plugin. Oh no. In fact, that was painful for me to actually tell you guys to use. But I had to because it's a piece of code in the functions files and it looks so good showing up to talk to the little page that was a post or whatever. So no, the easiest way is to find the code and save it and keep slapping it into a plugin that you made yourself so it's not in your theme. So let me see here if I can. I can actually. Oh my gosh. Yeah Jean asks, can you show us your application CPT. Yeah, yeah, I can show you both. Let me. I think I've got a little playground site in low and I can install it and I can also show you what the code looks like to. All right. So, do I have anything crazy on my desktop. Because like there's so many windows open that I need to like close. Okay, let's see. Close that. And with that now, this is my zoom. Okay. And I think I'm done with the Spotify. All right. All right, so this top. So I've got local as anybody use local it's free. I think WP engine now is in charge of it. So you can download this and you can put up any sites and work on them on your computer. So that's really a good thing. And I think I've got this. This word camp example site when I was doing something. Oh, is it okay here? The dashboard territory. So, if we go to the plugins and get the see I should just tell my computer about to worry about these updates. Okay, so we're going to add new and we're going to do the custom post type. There's a bunch of different ones. Oh, we'll see. I have to already update. See that's like they're on it man, like they you can't use it with old versions of WordPress. I like that. That's something you do want to make sure that you are keeping your plugins up to date on your live sites, especially this is a site that is maybe I shouldn't have opened this site. This is a site that is a local so it's not like there's no threat for anyone coming in and hacking it. But if you're on a live site and you have 15 plugins and you're not updated, I would suggest that you go and update those. Let's try my blueprint instead. Let's see what happens here. Oh, I mean, so this is not the type of efficiency that I'm like, down with right now. So we got to find I might have to actually go to a real website that I work on with the clients and stuff but I don't want to do those it's going to be a WordPress TV, because it's there. So, so let's see if I can go into plugins here. Oh, okay. Okay. It's not letting me do that. All right, let's do something really crazy. Let's do Let's start and create a new site real quick. You can I can show you how quickly you can do this. So this is local creating a new site. I'm doing it. Learn WordPress. I continue. You want to use their preferred thing because that's you always want to develop kind of where WordPress is situated. And Okay, I'm going to do admin password, because this is so you can do stuff like that. Are there other people who are developing in the house. And otherwise this could be boring you socks up. That's why I gave you a story. This is the guy. This is my life right now. Oh my goodness. Yeah sounds like we have a few developers in here. Oh, good, good, good thing that is their life to like. Let me see the chat. I can like if I can look at the chat while I'm waiting. So, while this is doing that, why don't I show you something. Oh, hey, I can go in. Oh, what did I put? I think I just did. Does anybody remember what I put in there? Help me. I'm looking for you guys for some help here. I think I put lower case. Did I don't know. I'm scared. No, I didn't do obscure. I didn't make it totally did not. So we can actually have this happen. There we go. Today. So I didn't do that. So remove that. I know. I know you guys saw me. I was using the wrong password thing. Not good. Okay, so now if I go over the plugins, this is going to now we're going to do something. Gonna have something happen. And I put in custom. Post type new. I okay. It's right here. You can install it. And a million plus activation. So there's, there's a lot of people who are, who are, who do not have that fable happening on their. Their dashboard territory. So activate. And then. So you come in here and it says, um, add edit post types. And taxonomy is remember the taxonomy. So it's very important that you don't mix taxonomy and category. Now you can use it. Mix it up when you're talking about it. Like you can say, Hey, I have categories for my recipes. You can say that, but code wise, you're using a taxonomy. Because if you try to use categories and any kind of weird code. It's not going to work. Categories. C A T cat only works with blog post and T A X works with. With the custom post types. So if I go here and I want to add one, it could be right here. It says, what's the slug? And this is always part of the URL. Okay. It's going to be part of the URL when they, when they do the archive. So like I could do recipes. You could do S or not. And so right here, if I put move. I don't want to do that with the recipes. Recipes and then recipe. What this is doing is it's giving the words for all over the dashboard. So when you do pages, it'll say pages or page or there's a page in the trash. And so it looks like you can migrate school. So you add the post type. And then you just fill out the rest of this with, and I give you examples. And so that you can have all of those words in the right place. And then it's already. If you want to, okay, so if we added a new one, and this is the edit. Okay. So if you were to have more than one, you can use this dropdown and totally like scroll through them and do. And then there's a website that has about 15 custom post types. It's for a festival. And they have stages and musicians and all those different stuff. There's no way that would work with pages. There's no way. It would have been. Absolute loony bin. And so also when you're using custom post types, another thing about SEO and something called schema. If any mentor to that. It's like another level for SEO. It's when you put these schema tags on your content in your HTML, so that they show up in these rich formats in the search. It works way better if you've got post types and you're doing it that way. So you can group them. So all of this does, it just helps sit the foundation for all the other people that are going to help you. Another episode where it really worked really well for us at the festival. We were having a company build an app that could be used during the festival. And so all of the participants had to be imported into the app. So because they were all their own post type, we could use all in one export import and a spreadsheet. And it just imported directly into their app and they could put it in the music categories. They could put all that stuff in the right place. Now I want you to imagine if you had to do that same thing and then realize you went, oops, there are pages. You actually wouldn't do it. You just say, but we can't do that. Because there's just no way that that's a possibility that you could dig through all that. And it just makes these objects and these like bundles. It's so easy to manage. And then when you, you can just loop through them. And so like even on the festival, I mean, we can go and look at, if I go and look at, I guess it's the old one, we're going to go to the old musicians. This is what I was talking about with an archive. It's got two styles kind of merging because there's a new design this year. But this is the archive that is dynamically created because I made a musician post type. Now I had to come in and style it, but it's I'm only styling one little div area that's looping over and over again, these cards. And that's what the code is. And so I'm able to do that. And then I'm also able to target the taxonomies and the terms because these are objects because pages don't have categories. So that just gone. It's like, there's not much you can do there. So you really want to, to be honest, there should be more custom post types and blog posts on your website than pages. If you have a lot of information, because there's no way that all that's unique. And this like has to be one page. So, yeah, so this was cool. And then it was very easy to use Zapier. Because we zapped the musicians and other, like the performers who were more like aerialist and stuff. They zapped to workspaces on third party platforms. And I was able to do that very easy by saying just zap. I'm going to use the formidable on this form and this formidable has this amazing thing where you can target a post type and actually publish it. So I'm, we're not even posting these like people submit their application through the formidable form. And they hit submit and these are drafted until the curator says it's a go and then I'm coming and publish it. And of course rewrite their bio. Okay. Because they're musicians. They're not authors. Okay. So some of them are given a song lyrics for bios. It's kind of interesting. So anyway, that is. That's the, that's what that's the magic. That's the magic of having custom post types and, and you can do anything. It's like clay and it integrates with so many different things. So I hope I answered someone's question because I feel like I went all over the place because that's why I had to tell that story. Yeah. Just a quick little demo how, how you use it. I wanted to show you is there's a plugin, but this is what I do. Hmm. Yeah. I mentioned that she'd love a, a zap WP zoom session sometimes. Oh, that would be cool. So this is how I do it. I make a plugin, which. Oh my gosh. I showed some people heard that and was quaking in their boots. But all you need to do is go find a declaration, slap it in a file. Make sure the file and the folder have the same name. You don't have to, but it's best practice. Then upload it. It's a zip into your, your plugins and then turn it on and then start writing this put, if you put this code in that, that plugin, just putting that code in there. Then the Shazam that's what I use so that I can find the word and then just replace. So it's way faster than that plugin. That's why I do this. But if I showed you this first, you would have been like, no. So I found this code years ago and I just keep using it again and again. You know what I mean? So the code's not scary. People think it is, but it's really not that scary. When you get your pieces that worked. You keep them. So that's what, that's how I do it. And then there's tax on me part of that too. That's cool. Also asked if there is a CPT repository. Okay. What do you mean by that? Could you like, she says obviously each CPT is specific to each site, but seeing other examples could be helpful in building. Oh yeah. Oh, I see. I see what you're saying. Like, well. There's really, I mean, this guy's the limit. It's that. So let's, let's, let's, let's, we, how much time we got 15 minutes. Who asked the question? Oz. Oz. Yeah. Okay. So she must have an idea of something like, even if it's just a vague idea. So if you're working on a site, are you visited a site? Is there something that you could think of. You just put it in the chat. And we'll play, let's make a custom post type out of it. How would we do that? Yeah. So people, it's like most stuff in the chat, like. Teachers for a school district. Oh, awesome. Whoa, this is fun. So this is where you get the whiteboard out and you get the people on the team. You're like, so what happens when we're trying to contact the teachers and the school district and then people come in and they want to know what teachers working with what. And then people start going, uh, We have to go through all these pages and don't know where they are. So there's two custom post types there. Or there's a one custom post type and a cat and a taxonomy. So it depends on what is happening to the extent of like, what's happening with the school district too. So the teachers could be a custom post type and the school districts could be a custom post type. And then you can use a plugin like advanced custom fields, which has an object connection. Field and we'll show up where the teachers are and we'll show up where the school districts are. And then you can actually see. When you're on an edited school district, you can see which teachers are connected to it. And then when you're on the teacher editing her, you can see what school district she's connected to in the admin, but you can also like, there's like a plugin called by theme code pro. It's called theme code pro. I think and it's, and it gives you the code that you would need for the advanced custom fields. If you're going to put it in a template. And so what happens is those things loop on the page as well, because you've connected them. So there's, there's one way of doing it, depending on if the school district now would have to have different categories for the area it's at. You see what I'm saying? Like this is like a whole strategy. It's like everything is so organic and so infinite. It could be like any example. It's just tailor made for you. There's no, there's no like one size fits five people kind of thing. It's really about you being able to do exactly what you want because you have this ability to do these custom post types. So the teachers, if you were going to use it as the district as their category, then that then there would be a taxonomy page, just like a regular archive page shows up. The taxonomy page would be like LA school district. And then all the teachers who were had that category will just show up on that page. But it all depends on what you're going to be doing with the website and that information on the ground and on the site. Because I, the festival site that I'm working with. Yeah, the site's great, but there's a whole bunch of stuff happening that had, we had to shoot stuff to the app, going to like things, something called Podio, not for long, but and then we're like, this is so many things that happen. And so you, you, it's an exploratory discovery session that you need to have before you start making something. And so anybody who's enterprise level that's using WordPress, there's a team of people doing this for them. They're definitely using this custom post type thing. Awesome. Thank you for your insight. Let's see, we've got one more question, I think. Yeah, Miguel is asked about if it's possible to find your code templates anywhere. Oh, yes. Wordpress developer. Do you guys have got to go there? You've got to go to, let me get in here. Watch this. Custom post type. Code. The first should be, yeah, here we go. Registering custom post type. You really want to go in here and do this because here's the thing. See, we recommend that you put custom post types in a plugin rather than a theme. The reason why they're saying that and that's a plugin thing I told you, you turn your theme off and change it to something else. Custom post types go away. So you don't want to do that. You want to make this plugin. So if you go here. Oh my gosh, lots of things are starting to change. They're going to tell you what each one of the labels and things mean. So it's not just that you want to copy the code and slap it somewhere. You actually want to, you want to see here. I want to find the actual. This doesn't actually look like the clean version that I normally find. Maybe we can put that in. I'll show you that link. When I find it for me for like a developer thing, because it has like that code in there, but it explains what each one of those is for, because I do have the code. I use it over and over again, but that there is definitely a danger of like finding code and just not picking it somewhere. You don't know what it's doing with something else. So, but by code works, it does, but I just want to dissuade people from just doing that because you got to know what the code is doing. Is then, oh my gosh, it could be a nightmare. And Miguel also mentioned generate WP that your, your approach is very similar to generate WP. Are you familiar with that? Oh yeah, that's the one where you ask. You want to post type and it generates the code for you. And a bunch of other things too. I think I've been there before. Yeah. But the way I do it is because I just, I like, I have a plugin for the Lucidity Festival and there's like that piece of code is in there. And there's a way of doing the code without slapping it all in. You can actually do variables and stuff and just change names. But I didn't do it. I was lazy. But once you have like 17 of those in the file, you got to have search and replace has to be some unique word. So it shows them. That's a key. That's a tip. Find your code. The word. This was fun. Yeah. I'm glad about like the story went over. I was a little nervous. You did great. Well, thank you. Yeah. It was really, really insightful. And I hope that everyone else learned something new today. I know I definitely did Jean's comment. So that to you, Alicia, meetups with you are such fun and your enthusiasm is contagious. Please come to my meetup. Yeah. It's not just me that makes it fun. There's a whole cadre of like 10 people that we roam around because it's like a geek gang or something. And we were, we welcome you to any of the meetups that we're at. There's, there's mine, which is the south central coast. It's your WordPress adventure group. There's one at Santa Cruz. My friend Eagle does. Eric Lukert does a whole bunch of them. Mike Pilly in Bakersfield. There's just so many. They're all online. Online. Those names. I know all those names. Oh my gosh. Yeah, I shared a link to your meetup in the, in the chat. And yeah. Could you, could you stop sharing your screen for a moment and we'll, we'll wrap up. It looks like we don't have any more questions. But if you do any more questions, you can get in touch. Folks can get in touch. I'm going to show the screen one more time. So here's Alicia's. Contact info. Twitter X, whatever you want to call it these days. And then drop it realist. And our website is WP with heart.com. Yes. And if you want to keep in touch with the training team and with learn WordPress, we can join the WordPress slack at chat.wordpress.org. And join the training channel. And that's where we do a lot of this work on educational resources for the community. And if you're interested in doing a presentation, I'd love to help you. And get that started. And my contact info is here on mastodon and linked in. And wanted to thank you all for learning with us. And thank you, Alicia for, for the story time and poking around on. On a test site with us. This was great. Thank you. Let's see if we have any last minute thoughts here. Yeah. Lots of gratitude and chat. So yeah, thank you everyone that. Thank you. That joined us today. And we'll get this recording up on WordPress TV. Within the next day or so. Awesome. Yeah. Thank you, everyone. Thanks.