WEB DESIGN
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@d-healey thanks. So you can start a new store on WooCommerce - that's different to a Website right? i.e you need Wordpress (or similar) as well...
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WooCommerce is a plugin for Wordpress. You can host a wordpress site with any standard web hosting service.
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@Lindon Thanks will check them out. So you can have a static html website on PCloud using the public folder. But that's not much use here.
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@DanH Pcloud is not for website hosting, it's just storage, like dropbox, or a harddrive.Actually it looks like you're right, you can use it in a limited way for hosting web pages- but don't.
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@d-healey from their website:
Hosting a static HTML website
To use pCloud as a hosting solution for your website, simply put HTML-formatted text files and linked graphics in the Public Folder (or in a sub-folder). Click Share and Copy Link on the main directory, where your site's resources are. This will copy the index' URL to the clipboard and you can preview your website.
Optionally, you can add your own Error 404 HTML page to the website. Otherwise, pCloud's default Error 404 page will be shown when content is not accessible. -
@DanH said in WEB DESIGN:
@d-healey from their website:
Hosting a static HTML website
To use pCloud as a hosting solution for your website, simply put HTML-formatted text files and linked graphics in the Public Folder (or in a sub-folder). Click Share and Copy Link on the main directory, where your site's resources are. This will copy the index' URL to the clipboard and you can preview your website.
Optionally, you can add your own Error 404 HTML page to the website. Otherwise, pCloud's default Error 404 page will be shown when content is not accessible.this is really about as simple as it can get - and about as useful as it sounds....certainly no ecommerce solution
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Best solution is nestjs and nextjs :)
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@orange trying to follow the first video - the guys just adds the kadence theme to his site. I have no option to do that - only installing the theme, for which I have to be a pro member. Is that right?
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@DanH Woocommerce is great, but the learning curve is fairly steep and has a lot of really annoying quirks (we use it begrudgingly). I think a lot of devs use Shopify because everything is already set up. It's not as flexible as Woocommerce, but it's really quick and easy.
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@DanH You probably found the solution elswhere but just in case :
Download the free theme from Kadence using the "add new" option in the theme page :
then "Upload theme" :
and load the ZIP file you've downloaded.
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@Matt_SF I can’t see the add theme button! I’m wondering if I need to be a pro user in order to do so. It’s just not there.
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@Casey-Kolb can you do user areas etc in shopify?
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@DanH Yes, I'm fairly certain you can do user stuff in Shopify. Woocommerce's will be more robust and flexible though. In general, Woocommerce just doesn't look as good as Shopify and the backend is incredibly clunky, but you have the advantage to add any plugins you need.
We use this plugin for our license management – it generates a new license for each order and sends it with the transactional email. https://www.licensemanager.at/
It also comes with a really easy API, so you can validate licenses with the HISE server functions.
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Shopify is more like "in-the-box" all in one solution when it is compared to WP. Not quite detailed but very easy to use. You can think Shopify as macOS : ) WP is more like Windows, you need to dig in to make a cool and fast website also you need to install lots of plugins which means lots of UPDATES and performance bottleneck according to the plugin that you use.
So go with big theme/plugin developers. You really need to be able to update your website with the latest versions to be secure. Unknown plugin/theme developers can bring some trouble to your website with security and performance wise.
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WordPress' market share is 43% of all websites around the World.
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WooCommerce powers over 28.19% of all online stores around the World.
Yes standard WooCommerce product page is so boring but you have the customization options. Wordpress is highly flexible and also very straight forward to use, however at the same time it can be difficult sometimes for a new user depending on your design and expectations. But you can search videos on YouTube about how to use it. There are tons of tutorials.
@DanH said in WEB DESIGN:
@orange trying to follow the first video - the guys just adds the kadence theme to his site. I have no option to do that - only installing the theme, for which I have to be a pro member. Is that right?
I think you are using a different Wordpress version, maybe beta? There is a Coming Soon text up left corner, normally it shouldn't appear. Here is a quick guide:
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If you want to do some fast prototyping without using a live web server and all that entails you should install XAMPP.
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@orange For the local Wordpress installation, you can also use very cool and easy to use app, LocalWP (it is free): https://localwp.com/
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@orange @d-healey yeah I much prefer localwp too because it is made for WordPress, so as soon as you create a new site it installs and prepares WordPress, you open the browser and work instantly (very cool for trying things too in a blink of an eye)
Another cool feature is that it's easy to test your site from elsewhere by the mean of a tunnel (live link)
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@orange Can anyone suggest a good and preferably free bulk coupon generator for woo commerce?
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@DanH I'm using this one https://en-gb.wordpress.org/plugins/coupon-generator-for-woocommerce/
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@DanH said in WEB DESIGN:
@orange Can anyone suggest a good and preferably free bulk coupon generator for woo commerce?
https://wordpress.org/plugins/coupon-generator-for-woocommerce/