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23 July 2005
Based on 153 on WordPress.org
Just use “#” as the link. That won’t go anywhere.
Not currently. Please contact me if you’re interested in that functionality.
If you want to link to a full URL, you must include the http://
portion.
Yes. Linking to /my-photos.php
is a good idea, as it’ll still work if you move your site to a different domain.
Not currently. Please contact me if you’re interested in that functionality.
If you want to link to a full URL, you must include the http://
portion.
Yes. Linking to /my-photos.php
is a good idea, as it’ll still work if you move your site to a different domain.
If you want to link to a full URL, you must include the http://
portion.
Yes. Linking to /my-photos.php
is a good idea, as it’ll still work if you move your site to a different domain.
Yes. Linking to /my-photos.php
is a good idea, as it’ll still work if you move your site to a different domain.
@
in the URLwp_list_pages()
processing, and time-limit the cache.switch_to_blog()
is used… it now uses $blog_id
to keep their caches from stomping on each otherUpload the page-links-to
folder to your /wp-content/plugins/
directory.
Activate the “Page Links To” plugin.
Existing Content Usage:
Edit a page (or post or custom post type).
Below, find the Page Links To widget, select “A custom URL”, and add a URL of your choosing.
Optionally check the box to enable link opening in a new browser tab.
Save the page (or post or custom post type).
Done! Now that content will point to the URL that you chose. Also, if anyone had the old WordPress URL for that content, they will be redirected to the custom URL if they visit.
Creating New Page Links:
Click Pages > Add New Page Link.
Provide a title and a destination URL.
Optionally provide a custom slug, which will be used in creating a local redirect URL.
Click Publish.