Title: Trying WordPress Again
Last modified: August 18, 2016

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# Trying WordPress Again

 *  [Dani](https://wordpress.org/support/users/dani/)
 * (@dani)
 * [21 years, 9 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/trying-wordpress-again/)
 * About six months back I looked at upgrading from b2 to WordPress — and found 
   that for me, at least, WordPress didn’t offer the same flexibility as b2 did 
   for layouts. Since I rely on good old-fashioned HTML rather than CSS I’m sure
   this didn’t help matters much.
    I’ve just installed the latest copy of WordPress
   on my dev server and am working on trying to get a layout that I like. Same problems.
   I just can’t get the hang of how to change how to change the output of the archive
   and link lists to suit my page design. This is what I need… ` <tr> <td width="
   132">[" class="leftnavtext">POSTS FROM 01/2003</td> <td width="8"><img border
   ="0" height="11" width="8" src="LeftNavArrow.gif"></td> </tr>  And so on down
   the list of archived months… This doesn’t seem to be possible with WordPress.
   Or am I _still_ missing some vitally important part of WordPress’ output options?

Viewing 13 replies - 1 through 13 (of 13 total)

 *  [Root](https://wordpress.org/support/users/root/)
 * (@root)
 * [21 years, 9 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/trying-wordpress-again/#post-76224)
 * *gasps* in horror 🙂
 *  Thread Starter [Dani](https://wordpress.org/support/users/dani/)
 * (@dani)
 * [21 years, 9 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/trying-wordpress-again/#post-76235)
 * Umm… why the gasp?
 *  [TechGnome](https://wordpress.org/support/users/techgnome/)
 * (@techgnome)
 * [21 years, 9 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/trying-wordpress-again/#post-76238)
 * Because of the ta–ta–tables (*gack! -washes mouth out)…. a big feature for many
   of us that use WP is the table-less nature, allows for much greater flexibility
   in placement and ensures that the content is semantically correct (a list is 
   a list, a para is a para, a headline is a headline, etc)…. better for search 
   engines to find and categorize the content efficiently.
    I’m not sure the specific
   output that you are looking for is within WP’s capabilities, at least not without
   some hacking. A list of archives & old posts is just that, a list, ergo, within
   WP’s realm, it should be outputed as a set of ul (or ol) & li tags…. at least
   that’s my theory. But I do come with an offering, take a look at the Archives
   section of this page in the wiki: [http://wiki.wordpress.org/WPHacks](http://wiki.wordpress.org/WPHacks)
   it’s got some links to some of the different types of archives people have put
   together, one or more of those might be really close to what you are looking 
   for. TG
 *  Thread Starter [Dani](https://wordpress.org/support/users/dani/)
 * (@dani)
 * [21 years, 9 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/trying-wordpress-again/#post-76245)
 * TechGnome: Search engines? Find and categorize content efficiently? It sounds
   like you blog for traffic? Me, personally, I could care less about search engines
   and more for ease of use. And for me, CSS is not easy. I have a hard enough time
   using stylesheets to format text. I can’t even begin to imagine the horrors involved
   in trying to lay out an entire page based on CSS.
    I just don’t get the “a list
   is a list.” My html code, repeated, forms a list. Does it really matter *how*
   the list is made? I’m an extremely picky person… I believe the devil’s in the
   details, but this sematically correct stuff seems like overkill to me. As long
   as it looks like a list to the visiting client, how it gets done is of no great
   importance to me. Davidchait: Actually, I wasn’t too impressed with b2’s archive
   output either, considering it’s really no different from WordPress’. I put up
   with it, only because I couldn’t figure out how to change it, either. The archive/
   links list output is really the only thing I dislike about WordPress… I have 
   yet to see a WordPress site that has really blown me away with how the archives
   and links are formatted. And that just isn’t good enough for me anymore. I need
   to find a way of making the output visually striking. Danielle
 *  [Root](https://wordpress.org/support/users/root/)
 * (@root)
 * [21 years, 9 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/trying-wordpress-again/#post-76250)
 * Well your inability to format your links in a way you find aesthetically pleasing
   is unfortunate. But it has nothing to do either with WP or with CSS both of which
   together are capable of just about any visual effect you care to mention. And
   putting aside whether it is good or bad, once a set of links are in a list the
   effects you can apply are absolutely awesome. What does not make sense, is to
   throw away the tool created for the purpose, to reject some good design advice
   and then blame everybody else. And what you *put up with because you did not 
   know how to c hange*? Well whose problem is that.?
 *  Thread Starter [Dani](https://wordpress.org/support/users/dani/)
 * (@dani)
 * [21 years, 9 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/trying-wordpress-again/#post-76260)
 * Oh, it’s not necessarily a problem with WordPress, Root. I guess I could sit 
   down and learn CSS if I really had to. And it may be something that I end up 
   having to do. I just hate the idea of spending umpteen hours learning a craft
   that I’ll use once in a blue moon. Aside from my blog I have literally no use
   for CSS or HTML, so I try to get away with spending as little time on it as possible.
   I’ve changed the layout of my blog twice since December 2002, three times if 
   you count switching from static pages prior to that.
    Don’t get me wrong. I love
   WordPress. Loved b2 before that. Best blogging script I’ve looked at or used.
   Just wish the archives/links output was more usable for someone like myself —
   someone who doesn’t really want to take the time to learn the in’s and out’s 
   of CSS.
 *  [Root](https://wordpress.org/support/users/root/)
 * (@root)
 * [21 years, 9 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/trying-wordpress-again/#post-76289)
 * Well could you describe or point to an example of how you would like the links
   to look? Perhaps the CSS folks could help.
 *  Thread Starter [Dani](https://wordpress.org/support/users/dani/)
 * (@dani)
 * [21 years, 9 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/trying-wordpress-again/#post-76293)
 * Umm… no bulleting, for starters.
    I really don’t understand anything beyond the
   most basic of CSS. the_category() gives me a bulleted category in my template
   even when I remove my own stylesheet and point to the stylesheet for the default
   WordPress layout, which doesn’t have a bulleted category output in “Filed Under–”
   section of each post.
 *  [Root](https://wordpress.org/support/users/root/)
 * (@root)
 * [21 years, 9 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/trying-wordpress-again/#post-76294)
 * Those bullets are not being added by WP. They are the default behaviour in browsers
   when rendering unordered lists. As podz says all we need do is turn em off. And
   there they go.
 *  Thread Starter [Dani](https://wordpress.org/support/users/dani/)
 * (@dani)
 * [21 years, 9 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/trying-wordpress-again/#post-76358)
 * How can you tell what styles are applied to what parts of WordPress’ output. 
   It’s easy enough for me to set up styles for text when I know where/what/how 
   I’m using them. I won’t even claim to understand the stylesheets I see being 
   used by WordPress users. ul ul li? ul? li li? Yeah, I get easily lost.
 *  [jonimueller](https://wordpress.org/support/users/jonimueller/)
 * (@jonimueller)
 * [21 years, 9 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/trying-wordpress-again/#post-76372)
 * Dani, with all due respect, those are basic HTML tags. They aren’t new to CSS.
   I understand your frustration, especially with the sidebar and link lists. I 
   like a certain “design” and it’s a bit harder to accomplish it with the list 
   structure that WordPress uses. (I notice in the newest incarnation of MovableType
   that the default stylesheets now employ this same coding. I thought that was 
   interesting!) I fought it at first, but found it easier to just figure out how
   WP does things and then write my styles accordingly. It seems hard, but it truly
   isn’t. Wrestling with tables, to me, is much harder.
    If you want a link that
   describes the archive and then has an arrow, couldn’t you use the arrow.gif instead
   of the standard bullet in an unordered list? There is a stylesheet declaration
   to substitute an image for the standard bullet. But you may have to put up with
   the image being on the left of the link instead of the right, as you have it.
   Just throwing out ideas here. But as to your question, why care about proper 
   markup? Because proper markup is less likely to crash a browser or misrender (
   or not render at all) your page. Because even if you are not looking for traffic
   to your site, your site is on the Internet and I can only assume that it is there
   because you wish people to read it. CSS has been around for many years now. It’s
   nothing new. And it isn’t hard. Once you start using it, you’ll see how easy 
   it makes things. Meanwhile, here are some links that may help explain the WordPress
   stylesheets and template structure: From the WordPress WIKI: 1. [http://www.mfr.f2s.com/graphicalcss/](http://www.mfr.f2s.com/graphicalcss/)
   2. [http://wiki.wordpress.org/AnnotatedCss?PHPSESSID=76e7607a06775327e67a86c8a7086615](http://wiki.wordpress.org/AnnotatedCss?PHPSESSID=76e7607a06775327e67a86c8a7086615)
   Laughing Lizard’s commented index.php page: 1. [http://weblogtoolscollection.com/b2-img/index.phps](http://weblogtoolscollection.com/b2-img/index.phps)
   From Nuclear Moose: 1. [http://blog.nuclearmoose.ca/wp-docs/wp-layout-explained.htm](http://blog.nuclearmoose.ca/wp-docs/wp-layout-explained.htm)
   Hope these help you on your way!
 *  Thread Starter [Dani](https://wordpress.org/support/users/dani/)
 * (@dani)
 * [21 years, 9 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/trying-wordpress-again/#post-76485)
 * jonimueller – Sorry, but for me CSS is like climbing Mount Everest. It took me
   about an hour to lay out the template for my site revamp. And it’s a great layout.
   Looks great and validates HTML 4.01 Transitional. But, two days later I’m still
   struggling with WordPress and CSS. Oh, *my* CSS is fine… all my text is formatted
   just the way I want it, all my links, etc. No, it’s only when I go and set up
   the wordpress loop that everything gets ugly.
    Admittedly, that’s a not so much
   a problem with WordPress as it is trying to blend my HTML with a script that 
   tries to produce XHTML-compliant output. So here’s the new question. Which WordPress
   script file actually handles the output, the one that writes tags such as ” li”
   and class data such as class=”category-post”? The only way I think I’ll ever 
   be able to make this work the way I’d like it to is to simply eliminate this 
   forced output from the script.
 *  [Root](https://wordpress.org/support/users/root/)
 * (@root)
 * [21 years, 9 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/trying-wordpress-again/#post-76486)
 * [@jonimueller](https://wordpress.org/support/users/jonimueller/): we could all
   appreciate your new found love for CSS more if your style sheet actually loaded.

Viewing 13 replies - 1 through 13 (of 13 total)

The topic ‘Trying WordPress Again’ is closed to new replies.

 * In: [Fixing WordPress](https://wordpress.org/support/forum/how-to-and-troubleshooting/)
 * 13 replies
 * 4 participants
 * Last reply from: [Root](https://wordpress.org/support/users/root/)
 * Last activity: [21 years, 9 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/trying-wordpress-again/#post-76486)
 * Status: not resolved

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