Rating: 5 stars
Still playing with but so far so awesome
]]>Rating: 4 stars
Nice work! This plugin is already very polished and easy to use. Here’s some notes to hopefully help make the plugin better:
1. The “Model icon” can’t currently be changed after creation
2. No single-select field type
3. No multi-select field type. Bonus points if the values *aren’t* stored as a serialized string, thus making the data easier to query.
4. From what I can tell, the post types (“Models”) aren’t /?s=searchable and there appear to be relatively few hooks to latch onto currently.
5. Considering having boolean fields store a value, even when unselected.
6. Repeater fields! This is the biggest deal-breaker for me, but obviously one of the hardest features to pull off. Is this something that’s planned?
Thanks again for all your work on this!
]]>Rating: 5 stars
I know I’m biased, but it’s rare to have a plugin with a fast and beautiful UX design for administrators. It’s great to not have to glue multiple plugins together like CPTUI and ACF and then the WPGraphQL bridge for ACF and so on; it’s nice that all the data “just works” as well from the API perspective.
]]>Rating: 5 stars
I’ve been building headless WordPress sites for several years. Registering my custom post types, taxonomies, custom fields & relationships and exposing all of that data in the WPGraphQL schema has always required cobbling together several plugins and configuring each one separately. Atlas Content Modeler remove those pain points.
ACM is a single, unified tool I can use to create my content models. It automatically exposes their public data in the WPGraphQL schema. Because of that, after I create my content models, I can jump straight into consuming their data in my decoupled JavaScript app. ACM is a huge win for simplicity and productivity. Highly recommended!
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