Rating: 5 stars
This plugin really pushed the edge of WordPress forward. JAMstack-like, it helps you fetch tons of Airtable data and provides a flexible and developer-friendly way to deal with all that data in WordPress.
So glad this plugin exists, and I hope it will for a long time to come!
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So glad we found this!
Now updating WordPress from Airtable is an absolute breeze.
This plugin has to stay alive!
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I hope this plugin continues to receive support. There are many ways this Plugin has been useful. I continue to find its use in my recent WordPress builds.
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I love this plugin. It has allowed me to publish a huge amount of content from Airtable. That means I can create my own CMS and publish direct from Airtable to WordPress. It takes a while to get the hang of how to use these two systems but it’s worth the ride. Chester has been helpful when I have reached out. Thanks for creating this Chester. Keep up the great work. I’d love to see this continue to develop.
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I’ve been posting in the support forum for this plugin and realized I hadn’t posted a review. Airpress makes this possible; the ability to fetch and output that data – along with the ability to create templates to format it. Very powerful plugin. Chester has also kindly provided some very detailed and helpful video screencast tutorials. As of this writing there isn’t (yet) written documentation available but I’m still giving this a 5 star rating because of its awesomeness. Thanks for sharing your plugin Chester!
pk
Rating: 5 stars
This is a plugin is great. As a non-developer, it was really easy to follow the tutorial video to get the connection working and presenting the data from Airtable. Also got some examples working via page templates. It would be great to have a couple more full examples of usage within php page templates.
5 stars from me and a big thanks to author.
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That’s exactly what I needed, thanks!
It’s not to be used by beginners, though, so I’m having a hard time here… only I know it’s my fault, not dev’s.
Rating: 5 stars
Simple and easy to use plugin. Some of the documentation could be improved but if you watch the tutorial videos, you’ll be up and running in no time.
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Plugin works well. takes some configuration but does what it says!
Take dev’s advice and read up on regex.
Rating: 5 stars
Amazing plugin. Surely still needs some work, but it already helped us a lot. Please keep building it! Happy to support where possible.
]]>Rating: 4 stars
After a few weeks with Airpress, I’m pretty well pleased. It does more than just simplify the process of integrating Airtable and WordPress: It enables one to use WordPress to build a customized front-end to an Airtable database.
Airtable is one of a number of web-based, SAS database systems to appear in recent years, along the lines of RestDB or [now Google] Firebase (although not at the same scale as the latter). If I had to grossly misrepresent it in a short, pithy slogan, I’d probably say “FileMaker for the Web.” Like FileMaker, it’s easy to learn and easy to program, but it still manages to be powerful enough one can actually build something useful. (Actually, what it most reminded me of, in spirit more than substance, was Infocom Cornerstone. ?? )
When I say “FileMaker,” though, I mean FileMaker 3 — or maybe 4. While the Airtable folks have been good about maintaining a steady stream of incremental enhancements and additional functionality, they are also serious about combating mission creep. As a result, there are still a number of capabilities missing from the base product. To address this issue, Airtable supports a full-featured and well-documented API.
…which, unfortunately, kind of takes it out of the “FileMaker” realm as a lightweight tool for rapid prototyping and deployment. Sure, it’s nice to know what’s out there, in case a client should ask, but for my own purposes the benefit I’ll gain from the app I hoped to create doesn’t justify the effort it would take to program it at that level. If I can’t build it in the solution natively, I’ll either wait until I can, or I’l do without.
Airpress gives me a third option.
Now I can continue to use Airtable’s standard UI to build and administer the database, but provide general user access through a custom front-end that can tailor user views, automate input, validate data, and support user authentication and privilege management far more flexibly than Airtable alone. As I’m building it using WordPress, I enjoy all the usual benefits of that platform; as much Airpress functionality is accessible via shortcodes, minimal PHP coding is required. And even though I’m drawing screens using data retrieved from a third-party database server, Airpress’s efficient management of memory and API calls allows me to do so with minimal lag.
To date, I’ve not encountered any conflicts between Airpress and other plugins. (At present, I’m using Elegant Themes’ omnibus ‘Divi’ theme, so this is no small matter.) While there *is* a slight delay when refreshing an Airpress-fed screen, I’m doing so while logged into WordPress admin, typically with several page edit windows — all using the Divi page builder — open, and with Airpress debugging enabled. I can’t claim to have tested thoroughly in a more production-like environment, but in the little I have, I’ve not seen a noticeable difference in response time between WordPress pages that use Airpress and ones that don’t.
Caveats: So far I’ve focused entirely on retrieval and presentation of existing data. As best I recall, my current implementation is handled entirely using shortcodes. That may no longer be possible as I move on to data editing and record creation and deletion. (Airpress provides a full-featured PHP API that supports creation, retrieval, update, and deletion of Airtable records; it also provides a group of shortcodes that supports a subset of its API functionality.) Documentation is scant and often lags the product; however, the plugin’s author typically responds to support questions quickly and clearly.
In fact, my satisfaction with Airpress in part reflects my satisfaction with its author. Admittedly, this is a nascent plugin, and Chester has done an excellent job of working with its early adopters, letting their — our — issues and needs help direct ongoing development. I’m not sure how well this will work once the number of installations increases ten- or a hundred-fold; by then, though, there should be fewer issues and, with luck, a fledgling user community.
Again, I give it 4 stars — and I see no reason to believe, with a little more functionality, it won’t soon merit 5.
]]>Rating: 4 stars
Enables you to bring Airtable data into a WordPress page or post. It’s not the most intuitive thing to use but the video is very good and explains how it all works well. I’d strongly recommend watching this before diving in.
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