• Home
  • About Mitch
  • Speaking
  • Articles
  • Contact
  • Home
  • About Mitch
  • Speaking
  • Articles
  • Contact

Digital Strategist

WordPress Developer

Content Creator

Unapologetic Punk

Mitch Canter

  • X
  • Bluesky
  • GitHub
  • Twitch
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn
WordPress

Better Know a WordPress Tag: ‘siteurl’

CMDR Mitchcraft

Reading time: 1 minute

When you’re working on a development site it’s hard to set things up correctly because you know you’re going to change the site, and putting in elements that are more than likely “stationary”, such as links, will have to be changed, and that causes un-necessary headache when it comes time to move the site live.  But, in the light of wanting to make your lives easier as a developer, there is a WordPress tag that can make your life much easier: ‘bloginfo’.  the ‘bloginfo’ tag can be given various arguments to make it bend to your will.  But, one of the most useful I’ve found:

<?php bloginfo(‘siteurl’); ?>

Instead of putting links in with just a leading slash (/about/), adding <?php bloginfo(‘siteurl’); ?> will automatically append the full site url before the sub-pages. Since most developers have their dev sites as a subfolder of a current site, this allows you to skip adding the development folder before each and every URL.  It’s also good for adding links into hardcoded content, such as graphical navigation, or specially coded front-page templates.

Example code:

<a href=”<?php bloginfo(‘siteurl’); ?>”>home</a>

this link will lead you to the home page.

<a href=”<?php bloginfo(‘siteurl’); ?>/about/”>about</a>

this link (if you have custom permalinks) will take you to the about page, no matter what website or server it’s hosted on.

Bloginfo, PHP, WordPress
  • WordPress BootCamp: Categories vs Tags

    WordPress BootCamp: Categories vs Tags

    Reading time: 2 minutes

    This is the second post of Mitch Canter’s “WordPress BootCamp” series… it showcases the ins and outs of WordPress to new users, and highlights some of the more popular (and some overlooked) features that make WordPress fantastic.  You can catch all of the posts here. I get a lot of questions on this: “What’s the…

    WordPress
  • Encryption, WordPress, Terrorism, and the Modern Web

    Encryption, WordPress, Terrorism, and the Modern Web

    Reading time: 5 minutes

    Editor’s Note: I try not to bring politics into my development discussions, but when they intersect, it’s always a good time for a teaching moment. If you leave a comment, be civil and follow the rules of having a good discussion, or I will outright delete your comments. There’s no room here for rude people.…

    WordPress