Title: Theme develope featured area best practices
Last modified: June 11, 2018

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# Theme develope featured area best practices

 *  [ingovals](https://wordpress.org/support/users/ingovals/)
 * (@ingovals)
 * [7 years, 11 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/theme-develope-featured-area-best-practices/)
 * Interested in learning from those that are more experienced than me. However 
   most guides online are aimed at non programmers and novices and do not go as 
   in depth as I hoped.
 * I’m a bit lost on how to implement semi static and well defined content. One 
   example is for a static front page on a site. I want to perhaps define a area
   on the front page where the user can put featured items on his site, or a list
   of services provided, or testimonials. I can already see a few solutions, but
   i’m just not certain that they are the right tool for the job. I’ll list those
   solutions and the reasons why I don’t think I should use them.
    -  **Widgets/Sidebar** would work but the problem I think there is that it is
      for very dynamic purposes. Lets say
       I’m defining a area that is only supposed
      to show 3 featured elements, but a user could add categories widget there,
      or a custome menu. Something not designed to fit in the area. Also I would
      need to create a custom widget or implement a html widget which would make
      editing harder for none technical minded user
    -  **Custom page types** I could create custom page types and display a loop
      of them in that area, I could thusly
       limit the number of items, put them 
      in a row etc. It just doesn’t feel like the right use case for Custom post
      types. In my opinion it is for actual content, not a one off semi static thing
      like this. Reviews on a tech site, cars on a car site, this are the things
      that custom post types are intended for right?
    -  **Register settings / Customizer** This one I haven’t looked enough into.
      Defining these things as a theme dependency
       or settings in the functions.
      php might be the way to go. I’m thinking these are mostly one off fields instead
      of a more multi element components.
    -  **Plugin** Likely there is a plugin for this exact purpose. I would like 
      to avoid using non-essential plugins
       but that might be wrong of me.
 * Do you understand what I’m talking about? I’m not asking for something heavily
   customizable, but something I can strongly define in a theme so that users can
   change the content of a semi static area.
 * This here will be a area for featured content, it will have a header, a paragraph,
   a icon, and a link. It will show in rows of 3 on large screens (this is of course
   not the problem, theme will handle displaying, just to give the idea what I’m
   going for).
 * This will be a area for testimonials, it will have a image, a qoute, a name and
   a twitter link. I will display this as a slider.

Viewing 5 replies - 1 through 5 (of 5 total)

 *  Moderator [Steven Stern (sterndata)](https://wordpress.org/support/users/sterndata/)
 * (@sterndata)
 * Volunteer Forum Moderator
 * [7 years, 11 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/theme-develope-featured-area-best-practices/#post-10387198)
 * I usually do stuff like that by creating a front-page.php template file in the
   theme and use Advanced Custom Fields to structure the edit page for that template
   so there’s no “free form” editing available — just the boxes, etc. I’ve even 
   built a slider using flexsider.js and ACF.
 *  Thread Starter [ingovals](https://wordpress.org/support/users/ingovals/)
 * (@ingovals)
 * [7 years, 11 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/theme-develope-featured-area-best-practices/#post-10387235)
 * [@sterndata](https://wordpress.org/support/users/sterndata/) Yeah Advanced Custom
   Fields seems to be pretty popular. But I’ve also heard it can become unwieldy
   in certain circumstances.
 * I will take a look and see how it works, thanks for the tip.
 *  Moderator [bcworkz](https://wordpress.org/support/users/bcworkz/)
 * (@bcworkz)
 * [7 years, 11 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/theme-develope-featured-area-best-practices/#post-10387886)
 * Unwieldy? I’d suspect anyone claiming that is Doing it Wrong™. Good alternatives
   are limited. You could build your own custom meta box(es), which is essentially
   what ACF does for you. You could use custom post types for at least some content.
   While posts were originally intended for blog entries, they are merely data container
   objects which we can use for any purpose where it makes sense. One example that
   comes to mind is testimonials. One could have a collection of a dozen or so, 
   but only display three on the front page. You could display the latest ones, 
   and maybe have another page linking to the remainder, or the remaining testimonials
   could be kept merely for archival reasons even if they are not used for display
   anywhere. Or you could randomly select three from the many to display differently
   on every request.
 * ACF or meta boxes make good sense in many places, but sometimes post types make
   the most sense. There’s no reason you cannot do both.
 *  [Nox](https://wordpress.org/support/users/profnox/)
 * (@profnox)
 * [7 years, 11 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/theme-develope-featured-area-best-practices/#post-10399291)
 * I was wondering about that too a few days before. Sometimes, there are some blocking
   situations in the development, and I do not know how to go forward within this
   context.
 * Here’s my most recurring case, dynamic contents with short and defined length,
   that should be call on several page, at different positions depending on them.
 * [https://image.ibb.co/hfODhy/schema.png](https://image.ibb.co/hfODhy/schema.png)
 * I presume CPT are still the best approach, but maybe I’m missing something …
    -  This reply was modified 7 years, 11 months ago by [Nox](https://wordpress.org/support/users/profnox/).
 *  Moderator [bcworkz](https://wordpress.org/support/users/bcworkz/)
 * (@bcworkz)
 * [7 years, 11 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/theme-develope-featured-area-best-practices/#post-10400181)
 * Static elements that occur on several pages can be managed with a partial template
   that’s loaded in by either a call to get_template_part() or loaded via shortcode.
 * What’s on that partial template again depends on the desired UI for managing 
   content. It could be all hardcoded if it does not need to be altered by the site
   owner. You could utilize ACF or meta boxes or CPTs as before. You could utilize
   an existing post type and only show such posts that have a particular category
   or taxonomy term assigned.
 * There are basically three different means of containing and displaying page content
   in WP: Posts, meta data, and templates (assuming you don’t wish to create your
   own means through a custom table). You can mix and match these, introduce custom
   UIs for them, etc., but you are still only using some combination of the basic
   three. How you make use of them though, is only limited by your creativity.

Viewing 5 replies - 1 through 5 (of 5 total)

The topic ‘Theme develope featured area best practices’ is closed to new replies.

## Tags

 * [custom post](https://wordpress.org/support/topic-tag/custom-post/)
 * [development](https://wordpress.org/support/topic-tag/development/)
 * [widget](https://wordpress.org/support/topic-tag/widget/)

 * In: [Developing with WordPress](https://wordpress.org/support/forum/wp-advanced/)
 * 5 replies
 * 4 participants
 * Last reply from: [bcworkz](https://wordpress.org/support/users/bcworkz/)
 * Last activity: [7 years, 11 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/theme-develope-featured-area-best-practices/#post-10400181)
 * Status: not resolved

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