• I love the initiative behind this plugin, this gives you a lot of versatility to work with Gutenberg, I really like the idea, and I was actually thinking if I should jump to build something like this but I was stopped by the idea that the Gutenberg teams should bring this options by default in the core of Gutenberg.

    The only concern to me is the performance that this kind of plugins can bring and also the locking effect created by default and by the nature of the plugin.

    I usually don’t approve inline css styles (which a lot plugins do) and when it comes to storage “code/styles” into the database I can not agree because that slows down the performance a lot and the databases become clunky with time.

    Anyways, good luck with this plugin, I gave it a spin and must say it offers greats options to play with.

    For my side I would consider to implement my own css rules, that is minimal code, 1 point request and flexibility.

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  • Plugin Author Munir Kamal

    (@munirkamal)

    Hey @xtremelora

    Thank you for your review and feedback. Of course, there is a little code/CSS load with such plugins, but in the end this saves time and more easier for non-techies to work with.

    I’ve tried to combine all the block level styles/CSS into a single style tag. So this is not inline CSS with each block already. I will also consider the CSS file generation method, but that has its own cons.

    Btw, I do not get your last point about “1 point request & flexibility”?

Viewing 1 replies (of 1 total)
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