Users can edit their own comments for a limited time, while admins can edit all comments.
Roughly 90% of the issues Ajax Edit Comments experiences is with multiple versions of jQuery running. Check your page source, and if you have multiple copies of jQuery being inserted, this is likely the issue.
The most common culprit is the theme in the header.php area. Please refrain from hard-coding in scripts and use wp_enqueue_script('jquery') before the wp_head() call.
The most common colorbox conflict is when there is another lightbox plugin that uses their own version of colorbox.
Go into Settings->Ajax Edit Comments, and go to the Styles section. You can adjust the settings there to get rid of the dropdown menu.
Go into Settings->Ajax Edit Comments, and go to the Styles section. From there, you can choose the icon set.
If a user posts a comment, but includes a rather spammy link as their URL, you can click the De-link button to remove the person's link.
Sometimes users leave a comment on the wrong post. With the "Move Comment" feature, you can select the comment, and move the comment to the correct post. You can do this by searching by the post title, the post ID, or by browsing your recent posts. Searching by Post Title and Post ID only shows the first five results. Browsing by posts should allow you access to all of your posts.
The "Request Deletion" feature is for anonymous users who leave comments. Sometimes a user has left a comment and would rather have it deleted than edit it. Call it buyer's remorse.
Once the user requests deletion, the comment is automatically "unapproved", the user is stripped of editing rights, and the admin of the blog is sent an e-mail of the deletion request. The admin can then decide whether to approve, edit, or delete the comment.
When you go into the Ajax Edit Comments settings page, you'll see a section called "Styles". From there, you'll be able to enter a "relative" URL to a stylesheet of your choice, which will override the styles provided by Ajax Edit Comments.
It's up to you to provide the relevant styles needed for the plugin in your own stylesheet.
Make sure you have the latest WordPress version installed. If you still have issues, try de-activating your plugins one-by-one to rule out a plugin conflict.
We strive for backwards compatibility, but can only support the plugin for the latest stable version of WordPress.
Not for this version.
No. Ajax Edit Comments 1.x is no longer supported. We encourage you to upgrade to the latest version of the plugin.
Yes, the last stable version for WP versions 2.1 - 2.5 is: 1.1.5.1.
Yes please go to our support forum here for our free plugin support. http://ithemes.com/forum/forum/132-support-for-free-plugins/
Requires: 2.8 or higher
Compatible up to: 3.3.1
Last Updated: 2012-1-19
Downloads: 223,335




