Yes, this plugin cannot follow the @import
directives in child themes. If there is enough interest, I can write the code for it.
Is this pro version limitation?
I mean I could do it by customizng with CSS (color, font size). But with Theme Tweaker I could test various color settings with my theme.
What Theme Tweaker does is to read the style.css file, locate all the strings that look like colors, and present them to you in an editable form. When you modify them, it inserts the modified colors into your blog pages along with the corresponding CSS directives after the theme style.css, thus overriding the styles defined therein.
It just doesn’t try to follow the @import directive in the style.css file (even in the Pro version). So it doesn’t find the color strings in the parent theme’s style.css.
ADT
(@adwaitatechnologies)
@manojtd
I am using a child theme. What is the best way to use your plugin? Shall I tweak the colours on the main theme and then create the child theme?
Same problem doesn’t work in child themes. Check this screenshot http://imgur.com/GUfU5BB 🙁