Hi @subratphp,
WooCommerce does not control the style and the way your product page is displayed. Your theme is what controls these styles. As it looks like your site was built with a custom theme called “Marblising” you’d want to reach out to your theme developers for assistance.
Let us know if we can be of any further help.
Yes it is a custom theme and using woocommerce templates wherever necessary. I didn’t do anything in the single page layout but have tried a gallery plugin after which such thing is noticed.
I am using WP rocket, perfmatters like plugins but not sure whether they can cause such issues.
Here is the plugin I was trying to implement: Advanced Woocommerce Product Gallery Slider
any ideas where i am going wrong?
Please check the gallery structure in screenshots provided.
Hey @subratphp,
This particular forum is for questions that are directly related to the features and functionality of the free WooCommerce plugin. It does not, however, offer support for questions related to any extensions or themes which can work with WooCommerce.
When trying to implement a third-party plugin called Advanced Woocommerce Product Gallery Slider into a WordPress theme called Marblising we’d suggest reaching out to the support teams for those products.
I’ve however performed some cross-testing for us today on several of my sites which have the latest versions of WordPress, WooCommerce and our free Storefront theme as the only enabled software. When doing so I’ve not been able to replicate the behaviour which you describe with product galleries displaying differently of logged in and non logged in users.
From what you have described with the product gallery images, it could be code from another plugin or theme which has caused a possible conflict and affected the functionality of WooCommerce.
To see if that is the case we’d suggest carrying out a conflict test on your site by disabling all other plugins aside from WooCommerce along with switching to a theme like Storefront. This will help with trying to and locate what software you have installed which could possibly be causing this behaviour? You could use a free plugin called Health Check and Troubleshooting to carry out such testing.
When in Troubleshooting mode all plugins will be deactivated and only the admin of the site carrying out the troubleshooting would see those changes. Any customers visiting the site would see no changes at all.
Once you have disabled all other plugins and switched theme if the behaviour is resolved you can then enabled your theme and sites plugins testing after each one is enabled until the behaviour returns to locate the culprit.
https://docs.woocommerce.com/document/how-to-test-for-conflicts/