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  • Thread Starter arghagain

    (@arghagain)

    LOL, I figured this out! For some reason, the first time around that I saw what wp-admin/network.php showed as for input of .htaccess codes, the codes were wrong, all I have to do was to access the /wp-admin/network.php directly again to see the correct code second time around!

    It’s now working perfectly after I fixed .htaccess!

    Oh, by the way, turn on the debug as true in your wp-config.php can really help you in knowing which plugin is not working! By deactivating plugins you have running one by one, whenever your site refresh without a specific error, then you know the plugin that just got deactivate is the culprit. Or you can look at the error notice to see if it mentions the plugin’s files and directory, if it’s, then you know right away which plugin that you need to deactivate without trying the hit and miss tactic.

    thanks all!

    Thread Starter arghagain

    (@arghagain)

    Has anyone had a solution to this yet? Thanks…

    Try to modify a wordpress template that model your HTML website’s looks and style. Then scrap your HTML website (though back it up and keep it for in case you change your mind about WordPress). Copying the contents over! I know this is a hard way. Unless you can find software that can steal contents on your own website and provide a way for you to import those contents of your into your WordPress — most likely in XML format I think! Doing this to someone else website is unethical and may get you into trouble with the laws!

    You are heading in the right direction because WordPress help you manage your content more effortlessly from now on and into the future. Changing template once for hundred or thousands of contents will be a merely a second since you only have to deactivate the old template and activate a new one. The only hard part is to design a good template!

    The golden rule for upgrading anything is to backup! If you have a backup, restore that. This time around, upgrade it manually to see if the same bug existed! Also, before doing the suggestion above, you could try reactivate or activate a new theme for your blog. Maybe the older theme is not compatible and is throwing an error, but your PHP server is not spitting it out onto the monitor, instead it may log the error to an error log that you have specified in your server! Look for that log to see if you could find any clue. The PHP log may not be there if you didn’t configure your PHP to do so!

    I experienced the same thing as GeorgWP. Update box open when clicking, but when entering texts, after hit update, text disappears but never reached Twitter! Using Firefox too. My WordPress is installed on PHP5.

    cannot deactivate super captcha. After deactivate it remains active in the active box. When remove the super captcha folder/files from plugins folder in wp-content, the super captcha remains active but show empty description in admin’s plugin dashboard. How to fix this? I’m using wordpress mu 2.8.2.

Viewing 6 replies - 1 through 6 (of 6 total)