Trusted WordPress tutorials, when you need them most.
Beginner’s Guide to WordPress
Copa WPB
25 Million+
Websites using our plugins
16+
Years of WordPress experience
3000+
WordPress tutorials
by experts

O Link Manager, também conhecido como Blogrolls, será “mais ou menos” removido no WordPress 3.5

Nota editorial: Ganhamos uma comissão de links de parceiros no WPBeginner. As comissões não afetam as opiniões ou avaliações de nossos editores. Saiba mais sobre Processo editorial.

Há cerca de um ano, escrevemos um post de opinião aqui no WPBeginner com o título“Os ‘links’ do Blogroll devem ser removidos em favor dos menus do WordPress?“. Recebemos um feedback decente nos comentários e em nossos canais de mídia social (Twitter e Facebook). Recentemente, enquanto navegávamos pelos próximos recursos do WordPress 3.5, notamos o tíquete #21307, que remove o gerenciador de links do núcleo.

Então, por que o intitulamos mais ou menos assim? Bem, porque ele só está sendo desativado para novos usuários por padrão. Se você tiver dados de links no banco de dados, o gerenciador de links permanecerá como está. Mas se você não tiver nenhum link, ele será desativado. Em outras palavras, o código do gerenciador de links ainda permanece no núcleo. Isso serve para garantir que essa atualização não danifique seu site nem exclua seus dados.

No entanto, no futuro, o plano é eliminar a base de código do gerenciador de links do núcleo e transformá-lo em um plug-in. Andrew Nacin, um dos principais colaboradores, já criou um plug-in chamado Link Manager. Atualmente, o objetivo desse plug-in é oferecer aos novos usuários a capacidade de ativar o gerenciador de links na versão 3.5, se assim desejarem.

Se você ainda estiver usando o Link Manager ou quiser usar o gerenciador de links, perguntamos por quê? Você pode obter tudo o que o gerenciador de links oferece e muito mais com os menus integrados do WordPress. Para ver como, basta dar uma olhada em nosso último artigo sobre esse assunto.

Definitivamente, estamos animados por ter um item de menu a menos. Qual é a sua opinião?

Divulgação: Nosso conteúdo é apoiado pelo leitor. Isso significa que, se você clicar em alguns de nossos links, poderemos receber uma comissão. Veja como o WPBeginner é financiado, por que isso é importante e como você pode nos apoiar. Aqui está nosso processo editorial.

Avatar

Editorial Staff at WPBeginner is a team of WordPress experts led by Syed Balkhi with over 16 years of experience in WordPress, Web Hosting, eCommerce, SEO, and Marketing. Started in 2009, WPBeginner is now the largest free WordPress resource site in the industry and is often referred to as the Wikipedia for WordPress.

O kit de ferramentas definitivo WordPress

Obtenha acesso GRATUITO ao nosso kit de ferramentas - uma coleção de produtos e recursos relacionados ao WordPress que todo profissional deve ter!

Reader Interactions

17 ComentáriosDeixe uma resposta

  1. Syed Balkhi says

    Hey WPBeginner readers,
    Did you know you can win exciting prizes by commenting on WPBeginner?
    Every month, our top blog commenters will win HUGE rewards, including premium WordPress plugin licenses and cash prizes.
    You can get more details about the contest from here.
    Start sharing your thoughts below to stand a chance to win!

  2. Alec Sorensen says

    Link Manager and menus don’t behave identically, which would be the main reason I’d be tempted to keep the Link Manager. For example, if you get links with get_bookmarks, it will return nothing if you don’t have that link category. However, wp_nav_menu will insert a random menu if it doesn’t find a menu with the right name… That’s a problem.

  3. Clay Asbury says

    We tried managing a large number of pages & links to resources (+500) on 3.5 recently and found out why the link manager is still needed. Use caution, we lost data due to this problem.

    Due to the volume of links, we used an iteration of Mega Menu (Uber Menu) to maximize horizontal real estate on Main navigation menu using columns to display 2nd and 3rd level items.

    Most pages required some form of secondary navigation as well. We used custom menus for the those.

    Very quickly we ran into a php error well known to the Uber Menu folks referencing “max_input_vars” affecting large menus, forms, etc… t’s set by defaul to 1000.

    You can manually override the limit in php.ini, IF your host allows it. I had to enable root access on one of MediaTemple’s Managed DV VPS servers by editing php.ini directly in /etc. If you’re on GoDaddy, you’re probably out of luck. Placing it in the root directory of your site doesn’t do the trick.

  4. Nico Julius says

    I’ve build dozens of WordPress blogs and I never needed the blogroll… until now. So I’m glad this function is still available in WordPress 3.5!

  5. Stephanie True Moss says

    I do not want to see the LinksManager go away! For a simple blogroll using a Menu instead is a viable option, but to limit WordPress by removing such a valuable asset as the LinksManager may be short-sighted.

    I have used theWordPress LinksManager to list QR Code services at – http://QRmedia.us – and the Links Library plugin to display them. I maintain multiple useful lists and the main list of QR Code Generators at – http://QRmedia.us/qr-code-generators-list – has 250 different links. A menu certainly wouldn’t handle that many links!

    I would like the option to use LinksManager in future sites – perhaps the same capabilities added with a plugin can be a viable answer.

    There are so many different ways to use WordPress that it seems awkward that anyone would want to close the door on such a useful part of WordPress – just because many have not figured out how to use it for anything more than a blogroll!

    • Editorial Staff says

      They don’t plan to get rid of the feature altogether. The goal is to slowly transition it out from the WordPress core into a separate plugin (which we linked to). You will have all the features as is.

      Administrador

      • Your Real Name says

        Yes, but if a site is currently using the Link Manager function for, oh, say, links, and it is removed from the core without the plugin being installed, what happens to the links? If we install the plugin, will it work off of the same tables in the database and ‘absorb’ the links already there or will they need to be reentered?

        • Editorial Staff says

          Not sure if you read the article properly. Second paragraph, first line: “it is only being disabled for new users by default. If you have link data in the database, then the link manager will stay as is.”

  6. owcv says

    The wordpress menu might be nice to create a smal blogroll of some certain links, but if you want to manage hundreds of links with additional information (e.g. with link library plugin) it is useless because of lack of categories and uncomfortable to manage because of the length. I created a link directory and need something more than just a custom menu blogroll or whatever.

  7. Heidi says

    Um yeah, I don’t know. But I use the links feature to display collections of links on pages via a plugin and it is much more than a “blogroll”

    We run a coupon site and I actually use the Links manager to input printable coupons of different types and display them on pages using a plugin. It automatically alphabetizes those links/coupons. And makes it very easy for me to find and delete a coupon when it has expired. So my pages are always fresh.

    I hope that this feature will not go away. Menus are great but they don’t function the way I need them to.

    Also for those who actually use the Links as a Blogroll for those with a widget on the sidebar there is no way to display a list of random links if you were to use menus. So let’s say you have 50 links in your blogroll but only want to display 5 at a time randomly on the sidebar…

    • Editorial Staff says

      Heidi, This is not going away in 3.5. It just won’t be visible for new users anymore. The code will still stay there for existing users. The plan is to do a smooth transaction from core to plugin in the later releases.

      Administrador

  8. ✍ Oscar Gonzalez ☺ says

    I use them quite a bit. here are two examples. http://cco-cpa.com/links/ and http://ptosisresources.com/ptosis-links-and-references/ – they are so easy for novices to add and change without having to worry about how they display up front.

    I wish they left them alone and build upon the references at the bottom, like the xfn manager. With things like Google+ authorship and other sites (to certainly follow suit). This link manager should have been grown and polished rather than removed.

    • ✍ Oscar Gonzalez ☺ says

      Oh yeah and I use a plugin to display them… so it would be nice to have that feature in core. I guess the newish “formats” might replace this if we use the “link” but I’m still not happy about this change.

  9. Scott Wyden Kivowitz says

    I use the Blogroll currently, but would be ok with using the menu feature to organize external links. However, there are two concerns. 1) WordPress needs to make a Blogroll to Menu conversion tool. 2) There needs to be a script that I can use, like with the Blogroll, to include a custom menu in a page template.

Deixe uma resposta

Obrigado por deixar um comentário. Lembre-se de que todos os comentários são moderados de acordo com nossos política de comentários, e seu endereço de e-mail NÃO será publicado. NÃO use palavras-chave no campo do nome. Vamos ter uma conversa pessoal e significativa.