Comments on: Weblog Theme Documentation http://ionfish.co.uk/2006/02/weblog-theme-documentation/ Stating the obvious since 1982 Mon, 09 Oct 2006 22:25:12 +0000 http://wordpress.org/?v=2.0.4 by: Kris Szafranski http://ionfish.co.uk/2006/02/weblog-theme-documentation/#comment-278 Tue, 21 Feb 2006 15:11:58 +0000 http://ionfish.co.uk/2006/02/weblog-theme-documentation/#comment-278 As far as digging through other's themes, I find it most helpful if the author only comments things that are particularly cryptic or vauge. Themes are generally fairly simple to follow once you understand how they're put together. Sometimes the trick comes down to altering code-heavy elements such as Plug-ins. In those cases I find comments to be a necessity. As far as digging through other’s themes, I find it most helpful if the author only comments things that are particularly cryptic or vauge. Themes are generally fairly simple to follow once you understand how they’re put together. Sometimes the trick comes down to altering code-heavy elements such as Plug-ins. In those cases I find comments to be a necessity.

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by: Andrew Hamann http://ionfish.co.uk/2006/02/weblog-theme-documentation/#comment-277 Mon, 20 Feb 2006 23:22:19 +0000 http://ionfish.co.uk/2006/02/weblog-theme-documentation/#comment-277 Considering the fact that I learned a great deal of CSS, XHTML, and PHP from staring at WordPress themes, I definately can speak with experience. Personally, I hate documentation, unless something is so complex that you need it. Otherwise I wouldn't have any fun breaking things then fixing them again, because I wouldn't do it in the first place... ;-) Considering the fact that I learned a great deal of CSS, XHTML, and PHP from staring at WordPress themes, I definately can speak with experience. Personally, I hate documentation, unless something is so complex that you need it. Otherwise I wouldn’t have any fun breaking things then fixing them again, because I wouldn’t do it in the first place… ;-)

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