After v3.4.0 introduced the Active/Completed tab strip, clicking Restore on a completed note appeared to do nothing — the restored note never showed up. David: "the complete log does not return to active." Root cause: the Restore handler in wp_notes_page_callback() was the only action handler without a wp_redirect() + exit; after its update_option() calls. Every other handler (new note, mark-as-done single, mark-as-done bulk) had one. So Restore relied on the page falling through and re-rendering, which used to work when both Active and Completed sections rendered on the same page (user could glance up to see the restored note in the Active section). v3.4.0's single-pane tab render exposed the latent bug: after Restore, the URL still says ?tab=completed, so only Completed re-renders (minus the now-restored note), and the restored note is invisible on Active. Fix: add the missing redirect to admin.php?page=wp-notes (defaults to Active tab) after the restore completes. The restored note now appears in its new home immediately. Patch bump — bug fix only, no API or behavioural changes beyond the fix itself. Other handlers, storage model, tab structure, and CSS are unchanged.
34 KiB
Changelog
All notable changes to Logbook (formerly A-WP-Notes through v3.1.0, then WP Logbook in v3.2.0–v3.3.0) are documented here. Format: Keep a Changelog 1.1.0 — versioning: SemVer.
[Unreleased]
[3.4.1] — 2026-05-27
Fixed — Restore button now sends you to the Active tab where the restored note lives
After v3.4.0 introduced the Active/Completed tab strip, clicking Restore on a completed note appeared to "do something" but the restored note never showed up. David reported it as "the complete log does not return to active."
Root cause: the Restore action handler in wp_notes_page_callback() (line ~1340) was the only action handler in the file without a wp_redirect() + exit; after its update_option() calls — every other handler (new note, mark-as-done single, mark-as-done bulk) had one. So Restore was relying on the page falling through and re-rendering, which used to work when both Active and Completed sections rendered on the same page (the user could just glance up to see the restored note in the Active section). v3.4.0's single-pane tab render exposed the latent bug: after Restore, the URL still said ?tab=completed, so only Completed re-rendered (minus the now-restored note), and the restored note was invisible on Active.
Fix: add the missing redirect to admin.php?page=wp-notes (which defaults to the Active tab) after the restore completes. The restored note now appears in its new home immediately.
Files changed
wp-notes.php—wp_notes_page_callback()Restore handler: addedwp_redirect(admin_url('admin.php?page=wp-notes')); exit;after the twoupdate_option()calls. Five-line change plus a load-bearing comment explaining the bug history so future-Claude doesn't reintroduce it.- Plugin header
Version: 3.4.0 → 3.4.1;WP_NOTES_VERSIONconstant updated to match. PATCH bump (bug fix, no API or behavioural changes beyond the fix itself).
Not changed
- The other three action handlers (new note, mark-as-done) — they already had correct redirects; no need to touch.
- Storage model, tab structure, CSS — all unchanged from v3.4.0.
[3.4.0] — 2026-05-27
Added — Active / Completed tabs on the My Log page
The main Logbook page used to render two stacked sections — Active notes from wp_notes above, Completed notes from wp_done_notes below. As the lists grew, this became a "wall of stacked sections" with Completed pushing content off the visible fold and users having to scroll past it to scan their active work.
v3.4.0 replaces the stacked layout with a single-pane tabbed view using WordPress's native subsubsub filter-tab pattern (the same one Posts / Comments / Plugins admin pages use):
- Two tabs:
Active (N)andCompleted (M). Counts in the labels match the actual list lengths. - URL-driven state:
?page=wp-notes&tab=active(default) and?page=wp-notes&tab=completed. Bookmarkable, refresh-stable, back-button works. Invalid tab values fall back to Active server-side. - No JavaScript: each tab is a hyperlink. WP-admin core CSS handles the
.subsubsuband.currentstyling; we just add a small top/bottom margin block. - Single-pane render: only the selected tab's section is in the DOM, so no flash-of-wrong-content and no wasted markup.
- "Add a Note" form stays visible on both tabs — even from Completed you can think of something new to log.
This was flagged in the 2026-05-25 UX audit as the highest-payoff next move (Tier 3 item #7). When the v4 roadmap's timer / time_logged field ships, the tab structure can extend naturally to three tabs (TODO / IN PROGRESS / Completed) in the same place; for now, without that field, an IN PROGRESS tab would always be empty, so v3.4.0 ships the 2-tab version that matches the current data model.
Files changed
wp-notes.php—wp_notes_page_callback(): tab detection from$_GET['tab'](sanitized + whitelisted),subsubsubmarkup with link-builder viaadd_query_arg, single-pane conditional render of either the active or completed section. Replaces the previous two-stacked-section block.inc/wp-notes-styles.php— minor spacing (margin: 12px 0 18px) on.subsubsubso the tab strip has breathing room.- Plugin header
Version: 3.3.5 → 3.4.0;WP_NOTES_VERSIONconstant updated to match. MINOR bump (new feature, no breaking changes).
Not changed
- Storage model — Active and Completed remain in their separate options (
wp_notes,wp_done_notes). - The
wp_notes_display_notes($type)function ininc/wp-notes-display.php— already accepts the section type, no signature change needed. - No new DB writes, schema changes, AJAX endpoints, or dependencies.
[3.3.5] — 2026-05-25
Changed — Admin-menu icon
The WordPress admin sidebar icon for Logbook is now
dashicons-book-alt (a closed book) instead of the generic
cog wheel (dashicons-admin-generic). The closed-book glyph is the
most literal possible match for the word "logbook" in the Dashicons
set — reinforces the brand identity at the first place users see
the plugin every day.
If you'd prefer a different icon, the line lives in
wp-notes.php → wp_notes_admin_menu() as the 7th arg to
add_menu_page(). Alternatives worth considering:
dashicons-edit (pencil), dashicons-clipboard (clipboard),
dashicons-welcome-write-blog (pencil over paper),
dashicons-format-aside (notes glyph). Full list at
https://developer.wordpress.org/resource/dashicons/
Version bump
- wp-notes.php header 3.3.4 → 3.3.5
- WP_NOTES_VERSION constant 3.3.4 → 3.3.5
- About page version-history leads with v3.3.5; v3.3.4 demoted.
[3.3.4] — 2026-05-25
Repo renamed on Gitea: a-wp-notes-v3 → a-logbook. Also the
local working folder on M3: /Users/ranger/scripts/Gitea/a-logbook
(was a-wp-notes-v3-archive). The old repo name was a holdover
from the v3-of-A-WP-Notes archival era; with the plugin firmly
identifying as Logbook now, the repo and folder names should match.
Changed
inc/wp-notes-updater.php—WP_NOTES_GITEA_REPOconstant updated froma-wp-notes-v3toa-logbook. The update checker now hitshttps://git.davidtkeane.com/api/v1/repos/ranger/a-logbook/...on every check. (The constant remains override-able viadefine()inwp-config.phpif the repo ever moves again.)inc/wp-notes-about.php— "View the full CHANGELOG.md →" link on the version-history card updated to the new repo path.- Local working folder on M3 renamed to
a-logbookto match the Gitea repo name..git/configsurvived the move intact; remote URL updated separately.
Unchanged (zero-migration commitment continues)
- Plugin slug (
wp-notes). - Plugin text domain (
a-wp-notes). - All internal function names, constants (
WP_NOTES_*), DB option keys, user_meta keys, file names inside the plugin (wp-notes.php,inc/wp-notes-*.php). - Historical CHANGELOG references to
a-wp-notes-v3(e.g. in the v3.2.0 entry) stay as historical truth.
[3.3.3] — 2026-05-25
Verification bump. Pure version increment to test the end-to-end
"Check now" flow against the now-publicly-hosted Gitea repo. No
functional changes. David's Local install (running v3.3.2) should
now see "v3.3.3 available — Download .zip" in the Settings →
Updates panel once "Check now" is clicked, confirming the update
mechanism works against a real version delta. After the test, he
can git pull to land on v3.3.3 and watch the same panel flip back
to "You are up to date (v3.3.3)".
[3.3.2] — 2026-05-25
Fixed — update checker now works with tag-only workflows
The v3.3.0 update checker only queried Gitea's /releases/latest
endpoint, which requires a formal Release object (created via
the Gitea web UI with optional notes + zip assets). A plain
git tag v3.3.x && git push --tags from the terminal doesn't
create that Release object — so the checker kept returning "No
releases tagged on the Gitea repo yet" even when tags clearly
existed.
wp_notes_fetch_latest_release() now falls back to the
/tags?limit=1 endpoint when /releases/latest returns 404 (or
any non-200). It synthesises a release-like payload from the
newest tag — tag_name, an html_url pointing at the tag view,
the tag message as the body, and an empty assets[] array so the
existing download-URL logic falls through to Gitea's source-archive
URL pattern (/archive/<tag>.zip).
Net effect: the "Check now" button now finds the latest version
whether David creates formal Gitea Releases OR just pushes tags
with git push --tags. No workflow change required.
Known limitation (not a bug — flagged for awareness)
The Gitea repo ranger/a-wp-notes-v3 is currently private.
Anonymous API requests get a 404 (Gitea's standard behaviour to
avoid leaking the existence of private repos). The updater code is
correct, but it can't actually reach the API on a private repo
without authentication. Fix: change the repo visibility to
public on Gitea (Settings → Visibility) — appropriate anyway for a
GPL-licensed plugin headed for the WordPress.org marketplace.
[3.3.1] — 2026-05-25
Naming: dropped the WP prefix. The plugin is now just Logbook.
David's call after a short discussion about WordPress.org marketplace
considerations — WP.org's trademark policy historically discourages
plugins implying official endorsement via a WP prefix and has been
known to request a rename during submission review. Dropping it now
makes the name cleaner and sidesteps that future hurdle if/when
the plugin lands on the marketplace.
Changed
- All user-facing brand mentions:
WP Logbook→Logbookacross plugin header, admin menu, admin bar, dashboard widget, settings H1, main page H1, About page intro, About page card heading, feedback email subjects/body, error_log prefix, updater panel copy, and styles docblock. - About page version-history card gets a new top entry for v3.3.1 with the green "latest" pill; v3.3.0 demoted to the previous slot.
- CHANGELOG header line updated to track the full naming lineage: A-WP-Notes (≤v3.1.0) → WP Logbook (v3.2.0–v3.3.0) → Logbook (v3.3.1+).
Notably NOT changed
- Historical CHANGELOG entries for v3.2.0 (the original "WP Logbook" rebrand) still say "WP Logbook" — that was the correct name at the time and rewriting it would be revisionist.
- Same zero-migration commitment as the v3.2.0 rebrand: internal function names, constants, DB option keys, user_meta keys, file paths, plugin slug, and text domain all unchanged. Pure user-facing string change.
[3.3.0] — 2026-05-25
New feature: self-hosted update checker. WP Logbook is hosted on
the author's own Gitea instance (git.davidtkeane.com), not on
WordPress.org, so WordPress's built-in update flow doesn't see new
releases. This release adds a small Updates panel to the
Settings page that polls the Gitea Releases API and tells you when
there's a newer version waiting.
Added
inc/wp-notes-updater.php— full rewrite of the previous broken stub (which had a hardrequireon a non-existent vendor path and was never included from the main plugin file anyway).- Settings → Updates panel at the bottom of
Settings → WP Logbook → Settings. Shows the current status on load (cached), with a Check now button that force-refreshes against the Gitea API. wp_notes_fetch_latest_release()— hits/api/v1/repos/<owner>/<repo>/releases/lateston Gitea, parses the response, normalises into{version, html_url, download_url, body, published_at}. Prefers a.zipasset attached to the release; falls back to Gitea's source-archive URL (/archive/<tag>.zip).wp_notes_update_status()— version-compares againstWP_NOTES_VERSIONand returns one ofavailable,up-to-date, orunknown(the last when no release has been tagged yet — graceful first-time UX).- AJAX endpoint
wp_notes_check_updates— capability gated (manage_options) + nonce protected. Deletes the cache and re-fetches. - Quick links in the panel: View on Gitea and View all releases — both open the Gitea web UI in a new tab.
Cached
- Successful release fetches: 12 hours in a site transient.
- Negative responses (e.g. HTTP 404 = no releases tagged yet): 1 hour so a freshly-tagged release shows up quickly.
Installation flow (manual on purpose)
The panel does NOT auto-install. Manual path (printed in the
panel itself): download the .zip → deactivate plugin → upload via
Plugins → Add New → Upload → reactivate. Notes live in
wp_options so they survive the upgrade.
Notes for future-Claude / future-David
- The Gitea repo currently has zero release tags — so the very first run of this checker will show "No releases tagged on the Gitea repo yet." That's by design. Tag the v3.2.0 / v3.3.0 / v4 releases on Gitea as we ship them and the checker will start reporting versions on its own.
- The Gitea repo coordinates live in three constants at the top of
inc/wp-notes-updater.php(WP_NOTES_GITEA_HOST,_OWNER,_REPO). Override-able viadefine()inwp-config.phpif the repo ever moves.
Also in this release — heading rename carried over from the unreleased block
Changed — Section headings on My Log page renamed to match the logbook framing
Add New Note→New Log Entryon the create form postbox.Notes Todo List:→Log entriesabove the active/completed lists.- Row-level labels intentionally unchanged — buttons like Add Note / Mark as Done / empty-state No active notes found still say "note" because that's the unit-of-work term in the existing data model and UI. The headings are brand-y; the row-level strings are functional. Two different concerns, different rename scope.
[3.2.0] — 2026-05-25
Plugin rebrand: A-WP-Notes → WP Logbook. Bundles the rename
with the About-page rewrite and the working Leave-Feedback form that
were sitting in the post-3.1.0 unreleased block.
The plugin's identity has shifted over the day's work — from a notes pad to a work-logbook with time tracking, earnings, and a Wallet tile on the v4 roadmap. "WP Notes" undersold what it had become and collided semantically with WordPress's notes-as-memos connotation; "WP Logbook" matches both the freelancer-proof-of-work use case ("logbook for clients") and the student-evidence-of-work use case ("logbook for teachers"), and matches the exact word the plugin's own About-page intro had been using all day.
Changed
- Plugin Name header:
A-WP-Notes→WP Logbook. - Description header rewritten from "A plugin to add your notes to the WordPress dashboard with import/export functionality" to "A lightweight task & logbook plugin for WordPress. Log your daily work, mark tasks done, and keep a tidy record inside the dashboard. Perfect for freelancers showing clients what's been delivered and students proving work to teachers."
- Version bumped v3.1.0 → v3.2.0 (header +
WP_NOTES_VERSIONconstant). - Admin menu top-level
WP Notes→WP Logbook. - Admin sidebar submenu
My Notes→My Log(matches the new parent name; reads cleanly as "WP Logbook → My Log"). - Admin bar count menu
WP Notes (N)→WP Logbook (N). - Dashboard widget title
WP Notes→WP Logbook. - Settings page H1
WP Notes Settings→WP Logbook Settings. - Main page H1
WP Notes→WP Logbook. - About page every brand mention updated (intro card, "What WP Logbook does" heading, "Go to My Log →" CTA on the side-by-side intro that used to say "Go to WP Notes →").
- About page version history now leads with v3.2.0 (this
release) as
latestand demotes v3.1.0 to the previous entry. - CPT
menu_namelabelWP Notes→WP Logbook(cosmetic only; CPT is hidden from admin UI since the duplicate-form fix in v3.1.0). - Migration notice text "WP Notes needs to migrate…" → "WP Logbook needs to migrate…".
- Email-feedback subject
[Site] WP Notes feedback from X→[Site] WP Logbook feedback from X. Body intro line same change. - Legacy feedback.php subjects (
WP Notes Feedback/WP Notes Help Request) →WP Logbook Feedback/WP Logbook Help Request. These render only if the unused legacy feedback file is ever required-in; brought along for hygiene. error_log()prefix[WP Notes]→[WP Logbook].
Notably NOT changed (zero-migration commitment)
- All internal function names keep
wp_notes_*prefix. - All constants keep
WP_NOTES_*names. - All DB option keys (
wp_notes,wp_done_notes,wp_notes_settings,wp_notes_migration_completed,wp_notes_version,wp_notes_dismissed_empty_active|completed) stay as-is. No data migration runs on upgrade. - All
user_metakeys stay as-is. - Admin page slug
wp-notesstays — preserves bookmarks, the admin-bar#new-noteanchor, and the legacy?page=wp-notes-create→?page=wp-notesredirect added in v3.1.0. - Plugin text domain
a-wp-notesstays — would otherwise invalidate any future translation files. - File and directory names unchanged (
wp-notes.php,inc/wp-notes-*.php,assets/wp-notes-banner.jpg). The Gitea reporanger/a-wp-notes-v3is unchanged too — David can rename it on the Gitea side separately if he wants.
The rename is purely user-facing strings. Existing installs see the new name appear after a plugin file refresh, with zero behaviour change. No re-activation needed.
Changed — Leave Feedback form (more options, multi-select, wired to email)
The right-column "Leave Feedback" form on the About page has been
expanded from two radio buttons to seven checkboxes (users can
pick more than one), a new optional message textarea, and a submit
button that actually does something — it AJAX-posts to a new
WP handler that emails the site admin via wp_mail().
Form options (checkboxes — multi-select):
- I have ideas to improve this plugin
- I need help with this plugin
- I found a bug
- I'd like to request a new feature
- I'd like to share my use case
- Just saying thanks 🍀
- Other
Submission flow:
- Client-side: at least one checkbox OR a message is required; otherwise an inline hint shows.
- AJAX POST
wp_notes_submit_feedbackwith topics[] + message + nonce. - Server-side handler (
manage_optionscapability + nonce checked) sanitizes input, allow-lists the topic keys, then builds a plain- text email and ships it toget_option('admin_email')viawp_mail(). Reply-To is set to the submitting user's email so the admin can reply directly. - Email body includes: sender (display name + email + WP login), site URL, plugin version, the checked topics (pretty-labelled), and the message.
- Inline success message replaces the form on success; inline error message lets the user retry on failure.
The old radio-button + broken toggleSection('feedback-form-...')
logic that pointed at non-existent IDs has been replaced entirely.
The toggleSection() helper is kept defined but is now genuinely
unused on the About page — flagged for removal in a future Tier-2
pass.
Changed — About page rewritten (content + layout)
The About page (Settings → WP Notes → About) has been rewritten
from "wall of nested toggle boxes with outdated content" to
"readable cards with accurate content". The left column is now
three plain cards: What WP Notes does, Who it's for, and a
Version history that actually matches the current plugin
version.
What changed:
- Removed two
<button>onclick=toggleSection()</button>wrappers around the About and Version History sections. Users came to the About page to read content — hiding it behind a toggle was anti-UX. - "Version 2.0.3 (Current)" entry was lying — the plugin is now v3.1.0. Replaced the whole version section with a compact accurate summary (v3.1.0 → v3.0.2 → v2.x → v2.0.0) plus a prominent "View the full CHANGELOG.md →" link to the canonical history on Gitea so the on-page summary doesn't have to be exhaustive.
- Removed redundant duplicate paragraphs ("WP Notes is a versatile plugin that caters to a wide range of users" appeared twice in two lines).
- Removed invalid HTML — bare
<li>outside<ul>,<p>wrapping<li>. - Removed buried banner image + Buy-Me-A-Coffee that were inside the (hidden-by-default) Version History toggle, never seen by anyone. The banner already lives at the top of the page in the side-by-side intro row; the support link already lives in the right-column feedback card.
- Dropped the "Teachers want progress with Email Notifications" use-case — email notifications aren't implemented in v3.x so the claim was misleading.
- Added three CSS card classes (
.wp-notes-about-card,.wp-notes-about-card--versions) for visual rhythm with the intro row above, plus styling for the version entries (latest pill, monospace version labels).
The right-column feedback box is unchanged. toggleSection() is
also unchanged — still defined (no harm, used by the feedback
form's broken-since-forever submit handler which is its own
Tier 2 problem).
[3.1.0] — 2026-05-25
A single-day UX polish + bug-fix release. Nine commits worth of
work, focused on the main "My Notes" admin page: stripping out
years of layout debt, tightening the menu structure, removing
duplicates, and adding the per-user persistent dismissal of the
empty-state notice. No data migration required; storage model
unchanged (notes still live in wp_options).
Removed — Tools → My Notes shortcut (with backward-compatible redirect)
The "Tools → My Notes" admin menu shortcut has been removed. It
routed to a separate bare-bones form at ?page=wp-notes-create
rendered by wp_notes_create_page() — a stripped-down create form
with no notes list, no styling, and no parity with the main page.
The shortcut was a third route to "create a note" duplicating the two that already exist and work better:
- WP Notes → My Notes in the admin sidebar (the proper page — styled form + active/completed lists + edit + restore).
- Admin bar → WP Notes → New Note quick-access (jumps to the
form on the main page via
#new-noteanchor).
Backward-compat redirect: anyone hitting the legacy
?page=wp-notes-create URL (stale bookmark, old email link, etc.)
is now wp_safe_redirect()-ed to ?page=wp-notes via an
admin_init hook. No 404 / no "you do not have sufficient
permissions" page.
Code removed:
wp_notes_add_tools_menu()registration (theadd_management_pagecall and itsadd_action('admin_menu', ...)hook).wp_notes_create_page()function body in full — the bare-bones form renderer, no longer referenced anywhere.
Added — Persistent dismissal of the empty-state notice (user_meta)
The "No active/completed notes found" notice was already dismissible per-page-load, but pressing X only hid it for the current view — it returned on the next refresh. The dismissal is now persisted to user_meta per-user-per-list-type, so once you close it, it stays closed until you reset the flag.
Mechanics:
inc/wp-notes-display.phpchecksget_user_meta(uid, 'wp_notes_dismissed_empty_<type>')before rendering and skips the notice entirely when set.wp_ajax_wp_notes_dismiss_empty(new handler inwp-notes.php) validates a nonce +edit_postscapability, then writes the flag viaupdate_user_meta(). Acceptstypeofactiveorcompleted; rejects anything else.- An inline jQuery handler in
wp_notes_add_inline_scripts()listens for clicks on.wp-notes-empty .notice-dismiss(WP core's auto- injected X button), reads the data-attributes off the notice, and fires the AJAX call. WP core still handles the visual hide. - The notice element carries
data-wp-notes-empty-typeand a fresh per-renderdata-wp-notes-noncefor the round trip.
Reset: the flag is per-user-meta keyed
wp_notes_dismissed_empty_active /
wp_notes_dismissed_empty_completed. To make the notice reappear
for a user, an admin can clear those keys (or wp_delete_user
removes them automatically). A UI button to reset dismissed notices
is not built yet — flagged as a future enhancement if needed.
Fixed — Duplicate "Create a New WP Note" form at the bottom of My Notes
A second, bare-bones "Create a New WP Note" form was being
rendered at the bottom of the My Notes page, below the active
and completed lists. The form at the top (the proper Add New Note postbox with color/size/font/emoji controls) is the intended
one — the bottom one was a duplicate, redundant from a UX standpoint.
Root cause: WordPress registers BOTH the parent menu's callback
AND a submenu's callback against the same page hook when the two
share a menu_slug. When ?page=wp-notes is requested, both fire
in registration order. The submenu was passing wp_notes_create_page
as its callback (a separate bare-form renderer used by the
Tools-menu shortcut), so its output was getting appended below the
main page.
Fix: the My Notes submenu now passes an empty string as the
callback — the standard WP pattern when a submenu just relabels the
parent (same slug, same target page). Only the parent's
wp_notes_page_callback renders now. The wp_notes_create_page
function is unchanged and still serves the Tools → My Notes
shortcut at ?page=wp-notes-create.
Fixed — Empty-state notice ("No notes found") now dismissible
The "No active notes found" / "No completed notes found" inline
notice on the My Notes page rendered with class="notice notice-info"
but no is-dismissible modifier, so WordPress's core common.js
never attached an X close button to it. Users couldn't clear the
message for the current view. Adding is-dismissible is the only
change — WP core handles the X button render + click-to-hide
automatically. Dismissal is per-page-load (the message reappears on
next refresh if the list is still empty); persistence across
reloads would need user_meta tracking and isn't built yet.
Notice inventory after this fix — every notice the plugin emits is now both dismissible AND only fires in its intended state:
| Notice | Class | Fires when |
|---|---|---|
| "No active/completed notes found" | notice notice-info is-dismissible |
List is empty |
| Migration prompt | notice notice-info is-dismissible |
wp_notes_migration_completed option is unset |
| Settings save / import errors / import success | rendered by core settings_errors() (auto-dismissible since WP 4.2) |
Only on form submission events |
Changed — Removed duplicate smiley-face button on the emoji picker
The "Add emoji" formatting option rendered two clickable elements
stacked: the "Click to add emoji" text input AND a separate button
beside it with a smiley-face dashicon. Both opened the same dropdown
picker — visually duplicated and slightly confusing. The standalone
button has been removed; clicking the input itself still opens the
picker (the JS already wired both targets to the same handler).
Keyboard navigation (Enter/Space to toggle, Escape to close)
follows focus to the input instead of the now-gone button.
Orphaned .emoji-picker-button CSS rule deleted.
Changed — Menu labels: "Create WP Note" → "My Notes", "About WP Notes" → "About"
- "Create WP Note" submenu renamed to "My Notes" (both in the WP
Notes parent menu and the Tools → quick-access shortcut). The page
is the central dashboard — create form + active list + completed
list + edit + restore — so "Create" was misleadingly narrow.
"My Notes" matches the WP-native
Posts → All Postspattern. - "About WP Notes" submenu renamed to just "About". The WP Notes brand is already carried by the parent menu, so the submenu can be plain-spoken.
- About page H1 trimmed to match the Tier-1 style on the main
page:
<h1>About</h1>+ version chip instead of the old "Welcome to WP Notes About Page v3.0.2" mouthful. Samewp-heading-inline+page-title-action+wp-header-endrecipe. - Removed a redundant nested
<div id="header">withdisplay: noneon the About page — it was dead markup leftover from an older layout.
Changed — Banner moved to About page (side-by-side intro)
- Banner image removed from the Create-Note page. It was the first thing under the page title and took up significant vertical space before the user even saw the textarea. The Create-Note page is for doing, not for reading-about.
- Banner added to the top of the About page in a new
side-by-side row: banner image on the left (capped at 320px wide,
not full-bleed), and a short intro paragraph + "Go to WP Notes →"
CTA on the right. Stacks vertically on narrow screens via
flex-wrap. Lives inside its own.wp-notes-about-introblock so it doesn't interact with the rest of the About page's nested toggles. .wp-notes-header-banner/.wp-notes-banner-imgCSS removed fromwp-notes-styles.php— no longer used.
Changed — Tier 1 UX cleanup
Single pass through wp_notes_page_callback() to remove the layout
debt that had built up over previous releases. Functionality is
unchanged; the page is shorter, has one H1, and stops contradicting
itself.
- Single H1 on the page — was five (
Welcome to WP Notes,Welcome to WP Notes v3.0.2,About WP Notes,What WP Notes Offers,What's New in WP Notes v3.0.2). Now: justWP Noteswith the version chip alongside. Accessibility + SEO. - "Welcome / About" content collapsed from THREE on-page surfaces (a dismissible top notice + a nested toggle + a manual "Show Welcome Message" button) down to a single one-line description that links to the dedicated About page where the long copy already lives.
- Duplicate "Toggle Welcome Section" buttons removed. Both outer and inner toggle buttons had the same label but different targets — genuinely confusing. Both gone.
- "What's New v3.0.0" embedded changelog block removed. It was
hard-coded to v3.0.0 while the plugin reports v3.0.2 — the embed
was lying. The real history lives in
CHANGELOG.mdnow. - "Buy me a coffee" button moved from page header to page footer — promo content should not be the first thing under the page title. Now sits at the bottom of the notes lists, centred, where footer items belong.
- Invalid HTML cleaned up —
<li>tags outside<ul>,<p>tags wrapping<div>/<ul>. Was in the deleted welcome blob, so resolved by removal. - Dead bulk-action UI removed — both the per-row checkboxes and
the "Select all" header column in
wp_notes_display_notes()andwp_notes_list_table()were rendered but nothing acted on the selection. Removed both, with an inline comment marking the spot for when real bulk-actions get wired up. Edit-form colspan adjusted (6→4) to match the new column count. - Inline
<style>and<script>blocks for the dismissed about-box (~80 lines of localStorage-based dismiss tracking and show/hide logic) deleted along with the about-box itself — WordPress's ownnotice notice-info is-dismissibleand the user-meta dismissal API are the correct path if a banner needs to return. toggleSection()JS helper removed — no toggles remain on the page after the welcome-blob deletion.
Fixed (PHP 8.2 deprecation)
${size}px→{$size}pxin the dashboard list-table render.${var}string interpolation is deprecated in PHP 8.2 and will hard-error in PHP 9.
Notes
- The dedicated About page (
Settings → WP Notes → About WP Notes) is unchanged and still renderswp_notes_about_page()frominc/wp-notes-about.php. All the long welcome/about copy lives there — exactly where it belongs. - Banner image still renders, in its own bordered container at the top of the page. Moved out of the deleted nested toggle so it actually shows.
- Storage model is unchanged — notes still live in
wp_optionsunderwp_notes/wp_done_notes. The UX cleanup is purely presentational.
Fixed
-
"Add New Note" sidebar submenu opening the WordPress post editor. The plugin registered a
wp_notecustom post type withshow_ui => trueandshow_in_menu => 'wp-notes', which caused WordPress to auto-inject "All Notes" and "Add New" submenus under the WP Notes admin menu. The "Add New" submenu routed topost-new.php?post_type=wp_note— the standard WordPress post editor — but the live plugin stores notes inwp_options(get_option('wp_notes')), not as CPT posts. Saving in the post editor wrote to the wrong storage and the new note never appeared in the WP Notes list. Discovered 2026-05-25.Fixed by setting
show_uiandshow_in_menutofalseon thewp_noteCPT, andshow_ui/show_admin_column/show_in_resttofalseon thewp_note_categorytaxonomy. The CPT and taxonomy remain registered sowp_notes_migrate_to_cpt()can still usewp_insert_post()if/when the migration is run. The form on the actual WP Notes page (the one that POSTs to the same admin page) continues to work unchanged.
Notes
- The plugin currently uses two storage models: the active one is
wp_options(keywp_notes, with completed notes inwp_done_notes). The CPT + meta storage is the target of an unfinished migration; the helperwp_notes_migrate_to_cpt()is defined but unused by the live UI. Until that migration is completed, hiding the CPT from the admin UI prevents users from accidentally writing to the wrong store.
[3.0.2] — 2025-05-10 (last released version, baseline)
The v3 "without all the crap" release. Trimmed from the v1.1.5 feature-creep era which had bolted on:
- AI chat (multiple variants)
- AI personalities
- Journal mode
- Speedtest
- Tamagotchi (yes, really)
- Backup
- And more
v3 strips back to the essentials:
- Notes list (in
wp_options) - Create note form (color, size, font, emoji)
- Admin bar quick-access menu
- Settings page
- Import / Export
- About page
- Update checker
This baseline entry exists for historical context; future releases should keep adding entries above and remove this note once a real changelog history accrues.