Description
Squidge is a FREE WordpPress Plugin built for developers in mind compressing and convert images using jpegoptim,
optipng, cwebp, and libavif. It’s extremley simple to use and is designed to increase PSI and boost rankings.
Why?
Image compression in WordPress can be costly, confusing and sometimes just simply don’t work. We have aimed to simplify
the process by requiring the developer to install the required package on the operating system and Squidge does the
hard work for you.
- IT’S FREE
- Unlimited file size, no limits.
- Optimised for your site to rank.
- CLI to regenerate all of your media files.
- Helper functions to output images in templates.
- Uses the native
cwebp
andlibavif
libraries.
What does Squidge do?
Squidge compresses and converts image files when the user has uploaded a file to WordPress.
- Compresses JPG images using
jpegoptim
. - Compresses PNG images using
optipng
. - Converts JPG and PNG images to
.webp
files usingcwebp
with the appended extension e.g.image.jpg.webp
. - Converts JPG and PNG images to
.avif
files usinglibavif
with the appended extension e.g.image.jpg.avif
.
Render Images
To render images in templates, you can either set up nginx or apache rules to serve images dynamically or used the
squidge_image helper function. This dynamically checks if an .avif
or .webp
file is available on the file system
and returns the output.
Function
/**
* Returns a <picture> element with source media for the standard file passed
* (such as a JPG), the .avif file, the .webp file (if to exist on the file system).
*
* Appropriate <source> elements for image sizes with max widths.
* Finally, the main be outputted with alt and title text.
*
* - If lazy is true, the data-src or data-srcset will be appended.
* - If a class is set, the class will be outputted on the <picture> element.
*
* @param $image_id
* @param string $class
* @param false $lazy
* @return string
*/
function squidge_image($image_id, $class = '', $lazy = false)
Output
<picture class="picture">
<!-- Loads if AVIF is supported and the window is smaller than 400px wide -->
<source media="(max-width: 400px)" srcset="/sample-image.jpg.avif" type="image/avif">
<source media="(max-width: 400px)" srcset="/sample-image.jpg.webp" type="image/webp">
<source media="(max-width: 400px)" srcset="/sample-image.jpg">
<!-- AVIF & Wep Initial Sizes -->
<source srcset="/sample-image.jpg.avif" type="image/avif">
<source srcset="/sample-image.jpg.webp" type="image/webp">
<!-- Default -->
<img src="/sample-image.jpg" alt="Alt text" title="Sample JPG">
</picture>
Credits
Written by Ainsley Clark
Screenshots
Installation
- Go to the releases section and download the plugin.
- Upload the
squidge
plugin to your/wp-content/plugins/
directory. - Activate the plugin through the “Plugins” menu in WordPress.
- Check the Settings tab under
Settings | Squidge Options
to ensure the libraries are installed, if they aren’t,
run the commands listed dependent on your operating system. - Check the individual optimisation tabs and adjust settings accordingly.
- Done!
FAQ
-
Does the plugin replace existing images?
-
Yes
-
What are the supported operating systems?
-
Windows, Linux, & Mac OSX.
Reviews
Contributors & Developers
“Squidge” is open source software. The following people have contributed to this plugin.
Contributors“Squidge” has been translated into 1 locale. Thank you to the translators for their contributions.
Translate “Squidge” into your language.
Interested in development?
Browse the code, check out the SVN repository, or subscribe to the development log by RSS.
Changelog
0.1.0
- Initial Release