 other development tools. While a local development environment and a code editor are the two fundamental pieces of developing for WordPress, there are other community tools and resources that you might find useful. If you're developing a WordPress theme, the WordPress.org theme test data provides an option to import XML files containing dummy data for testing your themes. This lets you see how your theme performs with different types of content and layouts. You can also install the theme check plugin, which tests your theme for compliance with the latest WordPress standards and practices. Similarly for plugin developers, there is a plugin check plugin, which tests your plugin to ensure that it's up to the base required standards from the WordPress plugin review team. There are also a number of plugins that can help with debugging your code. These include debug bar, which adds a debug menu to the admin bar that shows query cache and other helpful debugging information, and a query monitor, which enables debugging of database queries, PHP errors, hooks and actions, block editor blocks, NQ script style sheets, HTTP API calls, and more. There is also the log deprecated notices plugin, which logs incorrect function usage, deprecated file usage, and deprecated function usage in your plugin or theme. You will learn more about these and other tools in future lessons.