Tag: Potassium

The following posts are tagged Potassium.

Sandbox designs and IE6 support

I have a feeling that I should get Potassium and Bromine (and my future Sandbox designs) to at least mostly if not fully support IE6. After all, these are CSS (and sometimes image) designs, meaning the Sandbox theme’s template HTML should remain completely intact.
Currently, Potassium and Bromine work in all browsers but IE6, with IE7 [...] Comments are closed. Read the complete article »


Potassium 1.0.4 & Thistle 1.0.1 released

Potassium 1.0.4 & Thistle 1.0.1 are both now available for download.
In this Potassium release, among other changes I also now allow it to deal differently with certain other widget options. See what you get for lack of extensive testing? Yes, I forgot
Changes for Potassium 1.0.4

Made compatible with Sandbox 1.5 by altering some theme-specific [...] Comments are closed. Read the complete article »


WordPress 2.5 and Potassium

I hate to nag, but please note that Potassium is a Sandbox design. Just CSS and images. All the template markup is provided by the Sandbox theme. That means you can’t come to me for any WordPress 2.5-related theme issues unless it’s a CSS-related issue (perhaps a change in CSS class or something) because I [...] Comments are closed. Read the complete article »


Potassium 1.0.3 released

Potassium 1.0.3 is now available for download. This release doesn’t really address any problems, and is instead just a heavily cut-down (in terms of blank lines) stylesheet and compatibility pack for use with Sandbox 1.0.0 for WordPress 2.3. Any further discrepancies with Sandbox 1.0.0 should be reported so I can make the necessary amendments.
Changes

Cut down [...] Comments are closed. Read the complete article »


Back to Potassium; WordPress theme news

November. The end of the Breast Cancer Awareness month, so it’s about time I shed the pink skin and take on my silver-white Potassium design.
I’ve been working very slowly on a WordPress theme. But I’ve decided to stop working on it and begin another theme project. Comments are closed. Read the complete article »


WordPress 2.3.1; Potassium 1.0.2.1 released

WordPress 2.3.1 is now live! This dot-one release fixes a security hole found in 2.3 along with some other not-so-serious bugs (including one that I reported and suggested a fix for myself but meh). I’ve just upgraded and everything seems cool. You can see the bugs in detail at Peter Westwood’s blog. And this bug, [...] Comments are closed. Read the complete article »


Learned Python… with no basic knowledge

If you’re not a programmer, you won’t be able to understand half of this post. You could try though, but I’m not forcing anyone.
The gist of this whole post was that all I did was write a few painfully simple lines of Python, have an idea to run it through the parser, do so, and [...] Comments are closed. Read the complete article »


Potassium 1.0.2 released

Potassium 1.0.2 is now available for download. This release addresses a few more CSS quirks as well as adding support for a couple additional CSS classes.
Changes

Altered the stylesheet description to remind you that Sandbox is required.
Support for tag cloud widgets introduced - the tag icon should now appear in these widgets as you can see [...] Comments are closed. Read the complete article »


Potassium, IE and WordPress 2.3 tags

OK, I’m getting fed up of all this Internet Explorer crap. As you know, Potassium does NOT support IE6. However, my first upcoming WordPress theme and a slight handful of my future themes will support IE6, and all future themes from my birthday ‘08 will not support IE6.
Now to rant about my tag cloud and [...] Comments are closed. Read the complete article »


Change in layout

EDIT [8/27]: Sorry IE6 users, lazy to figure out why splitting the sidebar breaks your experience. I’ve reverted to the single-column sidebar for you guys until I’m motivated enough to determine what that shitty browser is doing.
I’ve made my own copy of Potassium’s sidebar split into primary and secondary sidebars, but still kept them packed [...] Comments are closed. Read the complete article »