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Viewing 9 replies - 1 through 9 (of 9 total)
  • Thread Starter korngames

    (@korngames)

    I took your advice. I am a Linux fan, but we use Windows at work. I was able to find the code at two places inside an SQL file that is almost 200 megabytes. I’m thinking that this is the entire WP database for the domain. Is it safe to delete the code right out of the database?

    Thread Starter korngames

    (@korngames)

    Thank you for your response. It definitely isn’t in the footer, that’s where I’ve put the Analytics code that I want to use. There is a plugin for Google Analytics, but it is deactivated. I’ve been digging around everywhere, to no avail. I didn’t create this site, I’ve just inherited the responsibilities. The company that built it no longer exists.

    Forum: Fixing WordPress
    In reply to: Redirect Loop
    Thread Starter korngames

    (@korngames)

    Sorry for the delayed response, I’ve been extremely busy in recent days. I took down the bad link down for a while, and only recently began trying to fix it. I assume the problem has been there for quite a while.

    What do you suggest I do?

    Thank you for your help.

    Forum: Fixing WordPress
    In reply to: Redirect Loop
    Thread Starter korngames

    (@korngames)

    If anyone can please, I am still clueless on how to proceed with this issue. Thank you.

    Forum: Fixing WordPress
    In reply to: Redirect Loop
    Thread Starter korngames

    (@korngames)

    Any ideas? I’m stuck.

    Forum: Fixing WordPress
    In reply to: Busted in IE
    Thread Starter korngames

    (@korngames)

    Resolved.

    Forum: Fixing WordPress
    In reply to: Busted in IE
    Thread Starter korngames

    (@korngames)

    I added a line that fixed it.

    meta http-equiv=”X-UA-Compatible” content=”IE=Edge”

    This fixed the issue, and though we both thought it was a cache issue, it was something totally different. Apparently, there is a feature (if you wanna call it that) in IE that forces compatibility mode for webpages that are detected on the same intranet (subnet) as the computer you are using. You can uncheck the option locally, but that only fixes the individual computer, and doesn’t provide a permanent fix. The line of code I used above corrected everything, and forced compatibility to be disabled. That may not be the cleanest fix, but indeed it did take care of the problem. All of the computers that had issues before are no longer seeing them, and compatibility mode is grayed out when trying to view the page in IE.

    The page is rendering properly on all browsers, intranet or not. Thank you again!

    Forum: Fixing WordPress
    In reply to: Busted in IE
    Thread Starter korngames

    (@korngames)

    I want to thank both of you for your help so far. There was indeed a rogue plugin causing the problem.

    I’ve got another problem to sort out though, apparently IE (maybe?) compatibility settings are causing the header image to overlay the rest of the site. It doesn’t affect all computers, but when it does, it doesn’t matter which browser you use to view the site, and if you do happen to click the compatibility button on a computer where it was once working, it refuses to display properly again, even if you disable compatibility. Any ideas? I’ve included a screenshot of what is happening. You can also break the page yourself by clicking on the compatibility view icon in IE next to the address bar. Again, I truly appreciate the help.

    Screenshot:

    Screenshot

    Forum: Fixing WordPress
    In reply to: Busted in IE
    Thread Starter korngames

    (@korngames)

    No, there are 45 errors. Crazy.

    I didn’t make this page, I’ve just been tasked with the cleanup.

    Looking at the validator, there are a lot of things wrong, but I’m really not sure where to begin to fix them.

    Again, I appreciate the assistance.

Viewing 9 replies - 1 through 9 (of 9 total)