WordPress was originally created as a weblog or blog platform. But now WordPress has grown so powerful that you can use it to create any type of website and use it as a Content Management System (CMS). In this article, I'm going to share some of my WordPress tricks with you on how to make a better WordPress theme. I'm not a programmer nor developer, so I will focus more on the frontend development. Oh yeah, I forgot to mention that WordPress has made it so easy that even a non-programmer (designer like me) can build a wonderful website. My WordPress sites included: N.Design Studio, Best Web Gallery, Web Designer Wall, and some free WordPress Themes.
WordPress Conditional Tags
Conditional Tags are very useful when creating a dynamic WordPress theme. It allows you to control what content is displayed and how that content is displayed. Here are couple sample uses of Conditional Tags:
Dynamic Highlight Menu
Here is what I used to create a dynamic highlight menu on Best Web Gallery. In the first list item, if it is Home or Category or Archive or Search or Single, add class="current" to the <li> tag, which will highlight the "Gallery" button. Second item, if it is page with Page Slug "about", add class="current".
<ul id="nav">
<li<?php if ( is_home() || is_category() || is_archive() || is_search() || is_single() || is_date() ) { echo ' class="current"'; } ?>><a href="#">Gallery</a></li>
<li<?php if ( is_page('about') ) { echo ' class="current"'; } ?>><a href="#">About</a></li>
<li<?php if ( is_page('submit') ) { echo ' class="current"'; } ?>><a href="#">Submit</a></li>
</ul>
Dynamic Title tag
Again, I use Conditational Tags to output dynamic <title> tag in the header.php.
<title>
<?php
if (is_home()) {
echo bloginfo('name');
} elseif (is_404()) {
echo '404 Not Found';
} elseif (is_category()) {
echo 'Category:'; wp_title('');
} elseif (is_search()) {
echo 'Search Results';
} elseif ( is_day() || is_month() || is_year() ) {
echo 'Archives:'; wp_title('');
} else {
echo wp_title('');
}
?>
</title>
Dynamic Content
If you want to include a file that will only appear on the frontpage, here is the code:
<?php if ( is_home() ) { include ('file.php'); } ?>
Feature post highlighting
Let's say categoryID 2 is your Feature category and you want to add a CSS class to highlight all posts that are in Feature, you can use the following snippet in The Loop.
<?php if ( in_category('2') ) { echo ('class="feature"'); } ?>
Unique Single template
Suppose you want to use different Single template to display individual post in certain category. You can use the in_category to check what category is the post stored in and then use different Single template. In your default single.php, enter the code below. If the post is in category 1, use single1.php, elseif in category 2, use single2.php, otherwise use single_other.php.
<?php
$post = $wp_query- >post;
if ( in_category('1') ) {
include(TEMPLATEPATH . '/single1.php');
} elseif ( in_category('2') ) {
include(TEMPLATEPATH . '/single2.php');
} else {
include(TEMPLATEPATH . '/single_other.php');
}
? >
Unique Category template
Suppose you want to use different Category template to display specific category. Simply save your Category template as category-2.php (note: add "-" and the categoryID number to the file name). So, category-2.php will be used to display categoryID 2, category-3.php will be used for categoryID 3, and so on.
Display Google Ad after the first post
A lot of people have asked me for this. How to display a Google ad after the first post? It is very simple. You just need to add a variable ($loopcounter) in The Loop. If the $loopcounter is less than or equal to 1, then include google-ad.php code.
<?php if (have_posts()) : ?>
<?php while (have_posts()) : the_post(); $loopcounter++; ?>
// the loop stuffs
<?php if ($loopcounter <= 1) { include (TEMPLATEPATH . '/ad.php'); } ?>
<?php endwhile; ?>
<?php else : ?>
<?php endif; ?>
Query Posts
You can use query_posts to control which posts to show up in The Loop. It allows you to control what content to display, where to display, and how to display it. You can query or exclude specific categories, so you get full control of it. Here I will show you how to use query_posts to display a list of Latest Posts, Feature Posts, and how to exclude specific category.
Display Latest Posts
The following code will output the 5 latest posts in a list:
<?php query_posts('showposts=5'); ?>
<ul>
<?php while (have_posts()) : the_post(); ?>
<li><a href="<?php the_permalink() ?>"><?php the_title(); ?></a></li>
<?php endwhile;?>
</ul>
Display Feature Posts
Let's say categoryID 2 is your Feature category and you want to display 5 Feature posts in the sidebar, put this in your sidebar.php:
<?php query_posts('cat=2&showposts=5'); ?>
<ul>
<?php while (have_posts()) : the_post(); ?>
<li><a href="<?php the_permalink() ?>"><?php the_title(); ?></a></li>
<?php endwhile;?>
</ul>
Exclude specific category
You can also use query_posts to exclude specific category being displayed. The following code will exclude all posts in categoryID 2 (note: there is a minus sign before the ID number):
<?php query_posts('cat=-2'); ?>
<?php while (have_posts()) : the_post(); ?>
//the loop here
<?php endwhile;?>
Tips: you can overwrite the posts per page setting by using posts_per_page parameter (ie. <?php query_posts('posts_per_page=6'); ?>)
Custom Fields
Custom field is one the most powerful WordPress features. It allows you to attach extra data or text to the post along with the content and excerpt. With Custom Fields, you can literally trun a WordPress into any web portal CMS. On Web Designer Wall, I use Custom Field to display the article image and link it to the post.
First add the Custom Field in the post.

To display the article image and attach it with the post link, put the following code in The Loop:
<?php //get article_image (custom field) ?>
<?php $image = get_post_meta($post->ID, 'article_image', true); ?>
<a href="<?php the_permalink() ?>"><img src="<?php echo $image; ?>" alt="<?php the_title(); ?>" /></a>
Tips: don't forget WordPress allows you to create/store multi keys and the keys can be used more than once per post.
I used the same methodology and created a very dynamic template at Best Web Gallery, where I used Custom Fields to display the site thumbnail, tooltip image, and URL.
WP List Pages
Template tag wp_list_pages is commonly used to display a list of WP Pages in the header and sidebar for navigation purpose. Here I will show you how to use wp_list_pages to display a sitemap and sub-menu.
Site map
To generate a sitemap (sample) of all your Pages, put this code in your sitemap Page Template (note: I exclude pageID 12 because page12 is my sitemap page and I don't want to show it):
<ul>
<?php wp_list_pages('exclude=12&title_li=' ); ?>
</ul>
Dynamic Subpage Menu
Put this in your sidebar.php and it will output a subpage menu if there are subpages of the current page:
<?php
$children = wp_list_pages('title_li=&child_of='.$post->ID.'&echo=0');
if ($children) { ?>
<ul>
<?php echo $children; ?>
</ul>
<?php } ?>
Page Template
If you are using WordPress as a basic webpage management, you better don't miss out the Page Template feature. It allows you to customize how the Pages should be displayed. To use Page Template, first you need to create a Page Template, then you can assign the Page to specific template.
Here is how the Page Template structured (ie. portfolio.php):
<?php
/*
Template Name: Portfolio
*/
?>
<?php get_header(); ?>
//the loop here
<?php get_footer(); ?>
When you are writing or editing a page, look on the right tab "Page Template" and you should see the available templates.

WordPress Options
There are many built-in options in the Admin panels that can make your site much nicer. Here are some of them:
Custom Frontpage
By default, WordPress displays your blog posts on the frontpage. But if you want to have a static page (ie. welcome or splash page) instead, you can set that in Admin > Options > Reading.

Permalinks
Default WordPress uses www.yoursite.com/?p=123 for your post URLs, which is not URL nor search engine friendly. You can change the Permalinks setting through Admin > Options > Permalinks. Personally, I like to set the Permalinks to: /%category%/%postname%/

Category prefix
Default WordPress category prefix is "category" (ie. yoursite.com/category/cat-name/). By entering "article" in the Category base (Options > Permalinks), your category URLs will become: yoursite.com/article/cat-name/

Want more?
WordPress Codex is always the best place to learn about WordPress. Thank you WordPress and happy blogging!
Great article, just had a quick read! Would love to see even more tutorials like this, as there are so few out there!
That’s a cool tutorial! I started to setup a new homepage with WordPress only a few hours ago and your tips are coming just at the right moment. Thanks!
An excellent tutorial! Would you mind if I translated it into Chinese on my blog? Of course I will give the original URL. Thank you very much.
It’s a shame that I am not using WordPress anymore. :-( But thanks anyway, this was the kind of tutorial that I was missing when I started using WordPress. May it be of help to many newbies like me.
i’m starting my wordpress website and this is very useful !
i have been watching you guys for few days now , u are the best really :)
Hi Nick!
Very good tipps, thanks for them! I’ve found an another genius simple tipp at http://themeplayground.com/order-your-pages.
A question:
Your HTML/PHP snippets look pretty good. How do you generate the code: do you type span tags and CSS classes into the code or do you use a wp-plugin or similar?
with best regards
Leo
Great post!
BTW, one thing I don’t like about custom fields is that is so dificult to include them into feeds (for me, a non-developer like you). If you find a solution… please let us know!
;-)
This is one of the most useful WP article I’ve ever seen. I’ll give it a try asap! Thanks a lot!!!
Thanks. Useful article!
Very usefull article again! Keep on with providing great stuff! Worts a digg, so I dugg it :-)
Another very useful tutorial for WordPress by Nick. Great job man. Thanks for sharing it.
Excellent article! Really useful of use wanna-be coder designers.
I work for a University, and we use it as a “poor man’s CMS”. So far, we haven’t found any challenge we can’t find a solution for somewhere since there are so many plugins and extensions available. I didn’t know any PHP when I started using WordPress but have since been able to cut/paste/alter to do some very crazy things!
A few of our sites running on WP:
http://commencement.syr.edu
http://sia.syr.edu (in development)
This is great. I have a couple sites that are going to really benefit from this.
Interesting article, and nice site. I like the design. I totally agree that WordPress can be used to produce Content Management System. But in order to build more complicated web site I would recommend Joomla as a CMS.
Great collection. Thanks for sharing all these snippets.
Ive been looking to get into wordpress but have been put off by the backend stuff. Hope this will be the start of great things to come. Will let you know how I get on, thanks
exactly what I’ve been dying to see! Thank you thank you!
Love your site, btw.
Wow thats good. When I started reading this post I thought “bet I already know this stuff” as I have been using WordPress for years. But I must say there are a few things in there that are totally new to me. Thanks a lot.
This is a very nice post. I’ve been working on WordPress themes and when I’m making mine I have to have multiple WordPress codex windows open so I can look up features. Now that it’s all listed on one page, it will be a lot easier and faster to make WordPress themes.