[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"$fYdIzO0O3rG5mLf71Pgrvoh0B0St5x1VoCp8wWWPCiv8":3},{"slug":4,"display_name":4,"profile_url":5,"plugin_count":6,"total_installs":7,"avg_security_score":8,"avg_patch_time_days":9,"trust_score":10,"computed_at":11,"plugins":12},"cgarvey","https:\u002F\u002Fprofiles.wordpress.org\u002Fcgarvey\u002F",2,2500,85,30,84,"2026-04-04T06:37:32.039Z",[13,37],{"slug":14,"name":15,"version":16,"author":4,"author_profile":5,"description":17,"short_description":18,"active_installs":19,"downloaded":20,"rating":21,"num_ratings":22,"last_updated":23,"tested_up_to":24,"requires_at_least":25,"requires_php":26,"tags":27,"homepage":32,"download_link":33,"security_score":8,"vuln_count":34,"unpatched_count":34,"last_vuln_date":35,"fetched_at":36},"url-shortcodes","URL ShortCodes","1.2","\u003Cp>Sometimes you want to put the base URL (that of the blog, or that of the active template) in your content editor. Times when the template customising isn’t quite flexible enough.\u003Cbr \u002F>\nWith this plugin you can use [url_base] to output the base URL of the blog (as set in your Settings). Or, you can use [url_template] to output the URL of the active template.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>For example \u003Ccode>\u003Cimg src=\"[url_base]\u002Ftest.png \u002F>\u003C\u002Fcode> in your editor might output \u003Ccode>\u003Cimg src=\"http:\u002F\u002Flocalhost\u002Fwordpress\u002Ftest.png\" \u002F>\u003C\u002Fcode> (if http:\u002F\u002Flocalhost\u002Fwordpress is what you have configured as your blog URL in Settings).\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>The supported short codes are as follows:\u003Cbr \u002F>\n* [url_base] – the configured blog URL (set in Settings). E.g. http:\u002F\u002Flocalhost\u002Fwordpress\u003Cbr \u002F>\n* [url_template] – the URL of the active template. E.g. http:\u002F\u002Flocalhost\u002Fwordpress\u002Fwp-content\u002Fthemes\u002Fmytheme1\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch3>License\u003C\u002Fh3>\n\u003Cp>This plugin uses the GPLv3 license.\u003C\u002Fp>\n","URL ShortCodes plugin adds support for a basic short codes to use in your post\u002Fpage editor that produce correct absolute URLs.",2000,12824,100,1,"2018-12-08T00:33:00.000Z","5.0.25","2.9.0","",[4,28,29,30,31],"short-code","shortcode","stylesheet","template","http:\u002F\u002Fcgarvey.ie\u002F","https:\u002F\u002Fdownloads.wordpress.org\u002Fplugin\u002Furl-shortcodes.rel_1-02.zip",0,null,"2026-03-15T15:16:48.613Z",{"slug":38,"name":39,"version":40,"author":4,"author_profile":5,"description":41,"short_description":42,"active_installs":43,"downloaded":44,"rating":21,"num_ratings":45,"last_updated":46,"tested_up_to":24,"requires_at_least":47,"requires_php":26,"tags":48,"homepage":32,"download_link":54,"security_score":8,"vuln_count":34,"unpatched_count":34,"last_vuln_date":35,"fetched_at":36},"email-javascript-cloaker","Email JavaScript Cloak","1.03","\u003Cp>This plugin lets you use a shortcode to automatically generate ‘cloaked’ email addresses in your content.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>\u003Cem>What is cloaking?\u003C\u002Fem>\u003Cbr \u002F>\nTake an email address like barack@whitehouse.gov. If that was to appear on one of your posts\u002Fpages, it could easily be ‘scraped’ or ‘harvested’ automatically to add that email address to a spam list of some sort. Cloaking is all about making that harder to do.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>\u003Cem>How does this plugin do its cloaking?\u003C\u002Fem>\u003Cbr \u002F>\nFor any email address you include in your content, using the custom shortcode of [email barack@whitehouse.gov], that email address will appear as “barack -at- whitehouse -dot- gov” in your content initially. JavaScript running in the browser will then convert that email address to a regular, clickable, email link. Whilst it may seem pointless to convert a regular email address to a strange format only to convert it back again, the idea is that most automated ‘scrapers’, or ‘harvesters’, do not run JavaScript and hence won’t be able to pick up on the non-standard email address. The vast majority of users visiting your site will have JavaScript, and will see regular email addresses (not the strange format).\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>\u003Cem>What about users who have no JavaScript, or have it disabled?\u003C\u002Fem>\u003Cbr \u002F>\nThey will see the strange format (“barack -at- whitehouse -dot- gov”). You can include a footnote using a custom short code [emailnojs] which will explain the strange format, if you wish to cater for that tiny minority of visitors.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch3>License\u003C\u002Fh3>\n\u003Cp>This plugin uses the GPLv3 license.\u003C\u002Fp>\n","A simple plugin to use JavaScript to cloak email addresses in your WordPress content (posts & pages).",500,6347,4,"2018-12-08T00:24:00.000Z","3.5.0",[49,50,51,52,53],"cloaking","email-address","email-cloak","harvest","spam","https:\u002F\u002Fdownloads.wordpress.org\u002Fplugin\u002Femail-javascript-cloaker.rel_1-03.zip"]