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Did you remember to write a post for next Tuesday? What about the Tuesday after that? WordPress doesn’t make it easy to see when your posts are scheduled. The editorial calendar gives you an overview of your blog and when each post will be published. You can drag and drop to move posts, edit posts right in the calendar, and manage your entire blog.
Watch the video
Try it out
Try the calendar before you install it. Check out the demo installation at Zack’s WordPress Sandbox. You can log in with the username and password test.
Features
- See all of your posts and when they’ll be posted.
- Drag and drop to change your post dates.
- Manage your drafts with our new drafts drawer.
- Quickedit post titles, contents, and times.
- Publish posts or manage drafts.
- Easily see the status of your posts.
- Manage posts from multiple authors.
Make it better
Thank you to everyone who has given us feedback and helped us improve this plugin. If you have questions, problems, or ideas for new features please let us know at wp-edcal@googlegroups.com.
Translate it
Again, thanks to all who have already helped make the plugin available in so many languages. If you would like to help us translate the plugin into your language, or if you use it in a language other than English already and would like to help us keep it up to date, please write to us at wp-edcal@googlegroups.com
Screenshots
Installation
- Backup your WordPress database.
- Upload the plugin directory
editorial-calendar
to thewp-content/plugins
directory. - Activate the plugin through the ‘Plugins’ menu in WordPress.
- Click the new ‘Calendar’ option under the ‘Posts’ menu or any other custom post types.
FAQ
What is an editorial calendar?
An editorial calendar is simply a plan for your blog. It is thinking ahead about what you’re going to write. There’s a detailed explanation of editorial calendars at The Easy-to-Use Tool that Helps You Build a Breakthrough Blog from Copyblogger.
What are other people saying about the calendar?
From time to time people write articles about the editorial calendar. We appreciate every one.
5 Reasons You’ll Love the WordPress Editorial Calendar by Annabel Candy
Use An Editorial Calendar by Chris Brogan
Blogging For Web Designers: Editorial Calendars and Style Guides by Jessica Bordeau at Smashing Magazine
Editorial Calendar WordPress plugin review by Stephen Duckworth at My Digital Internet
Brogan is right – the “Editorial Calendar” WordPress plugin truly rocks! by Dan York
Editorial Calendar Plugin for WordPress by Steve Campbell
An Editorial Calendar Plugin For WordPress by Marketplace Mommies
Great WP Plugin for Online Editors: Editorial Calendar by Mequoda Daily
Drag and Drop Post Scheduling with the Editorial Calendar WordPress plugin by Chris Garrett
WordPress Plug-In Plug: Editorial Calendar on The Incidental Economist
How To Use The Editorial Calendar For WordPress by Rezdwan Hamid
Visually Manage Your Post Publication Dates with the Editorial Calendar WordPress Plugin on WordCast
Powerful Plugins That Keep You Organized and Increase Your Productivity at askcharlyleetham.com.
SEO Copywriting Checklist for WordPress Blogs on @WebSuccessDiva is a good article about SEO and using an editorial calendar.
Can I see a demo of the calendar?
Check out our demo installation at Zack’s WordPress Sandbox.
How do I get help using the calendar?
The WordPress Editorial Calendar Google Group is a good place to ask questions, find answers, and post feedback. We also follow the WordPress.org forum Editorial Calendar discussion.
How do I navigate in the calendar?
You can move around in the calendar using the arrows next to the months at the top or your mouse wheel. You can also move using your keyboard:
- Move 1 week into the past – Up Arrow
- Move 1 week into the future – Down Arrow
- Jump multiple weeks into the past – Page Up or Ctrl+Up Arrow
- Jump multiple weeks into the future – Page Down or Ctrl+Down Arrow
How do I change the first day of the week?
The editorial calendar follows the Week Starts On preference on the WordPress General Settings page. Choose the day you want and the calendar will use that day as the first day of the week.
What languages does the calendar support?
The calendar is available in Brazilian Portuguese, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Lithuanian, Norwegian, Polish, Russian, Spanish, and Swedish.
Can I add new languages?
Yes please! We are looking for translators. It only takes about 20 minutes. If you’re interested please contact us.
How does the calendar work
The calendar is written in JavaScript. It contacts your blog when it scrolls to get data about your posts. Just like Google Maps. Creating a JQuery Powered Posts Calendar for WordPress explains a lot of the technical details.
Is the calendar collecting data about my blog?
After you use the calendar a few times we’ll prompt you to let us collect a little data about your blog. Information like the size of your browser window and the number of posts you have per day help us make the calendar even better.
The collected data is all available to the public. Check out the Editorial Calendar Statistics.
What users can use the calendar?
The editorial calendar works differently based on your permissions.
- Administrators and Editors can use every feature available in the calendar.
- Authors can use the calendar to edit, move, and publish their own posts, but other people’s posts are read-only.
- Contributors see everyone’s posts and move their own posts, but can only save drafts.
- Subscribers can’t see the calendar.
You can see how it looks for different users on our Zack’s WordPress Sandbox with the following users:
- edgar the Editor
- alice the Author
- conrad the Contributor
- sam the Subscriber
Each of these users has the password test.
Can I use the editorial calendar with pages?
Right now the calendar only supports posts. We’re considering adding pages. If you would like to see pages show up in the calendar let us know.
Does the calendar support group blogs?
If your blog has multiple authors the calendar will work just fine. You can show author names right in the calendar. Just look under screen options.
We are currently working on new features for multi-author blogs. If you have any ideas please contact us.
Can my readers tell I’m using the editorial calendar?
No. The calendar is only an administration tool. None of your readers will know you’re running it unless you tell them.
Why can’t I move published posts?
Moving published posts can cause problems with some RSS feeds and is generally not a very popular thing to do. The calendar only allows you to move scheduled and draft posts.
Contexts 3.7.1 For Mac
Can I change post colors or styles in the calendar?
You can style the posts in the calendar with CSS on your blog. The calendar adds a new CSS class to your post for every catalog. The class is based on the slug for the category.
For example, if you have a category named “My Category” you might have a slug for it named “my-category”. Then you can make all posts with that category show up as red in the calendar with CSS like this:
You can use any CSS properties to change posts in the calendar based on the post category.
Can I change default post time or status when creating new posts?
The calendar allows you to create new posts. The default time for this new posts is 10:00 AM and the default status for this new posts is draft. You can change those values by specifying options in your blog.
The edcal_default_time
property controls the default time for new posts in the calendar. This value is in 24 hour time and you can change it by specifying the time in a format like 11:00
.
The edcal_default_status
property controls the default status for new posts in the calendar. The allowed values are draft
, future
, and pending
for the statuses of Draft
, Scheduled
, and Pending Review
respectively. This value will only be used if the current user doesn’t have access to change that status. For example, if you’re an author then you can’t use a default status of pending
since you aren’t allowed to publish posts.
Reviews
Pre-processing and Post-processing Methods¶
Data pre-processing and post-processing methods can be registered using the pre_load
, post_load
, pre_dump
, and post_dump
decorators.
Passing “many”¶
By default, pre- and post-processing methods receive one object/datum at a time, transparently handling the many
parameter passed to the Schema
’s dump()
/load()
method at runtime.
In cases where your pre- and post-processing methods needs to handle the input collection when processing multiple objects, add pass_many=True
to the method decorators.
Your method will then receive the input data (which may be a single datum or a collection, depending on the dump/load call).
Example: Enveloping¶
One common use case is to wrap data in a namespace upon serialization and unwrap the data during deserialization.
Raising Errors in Pre-/Post-processor Methods¶
Pre- and post-processing methods may raise a ValidationError
. By default, errors will be stored on the '_schema'
key in the errors dictionary.
If you want to store and error on a different key, pass the key name as the second argument to ValidationError
.
Pre-/Post-processor Invocation Order¶
Contexts 3.7.1 For Free
In summary, the processing pipeline for deserialization is as follows:
@pre_load(pass_many=True)
methods@pre_load(pass_many=False)
methodsload(in_data,many)
(validation and deserialization)@post_load(pass_many=True)
methods@post_load(pass_many=False)
methods
The pipeline for serialization is similar, except that the pass_many=True
processors are invoked after the pass_many=False
processors.
Contexts 3.7.1 For Android
@pre_dump(pass_many=False)
methods@pre_dump(pass_many=True)
methodsdump(obj,many)
(serialization)@post_dump(pass_many=False)
methods@post_dump(pass_many=True)
methods
Warning
Contexts 3.7.1 For Windows 7
You may register multiple processor methods on a Schema. Keep in mind, however, that the invocation order of decorated methods of the same type is not guaranteed. If you need to guarantee order of processing steps, you should put them in the same method.