[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"$fRZY3NAz9MReEc0le47xSWRZtbtPQwUvpGBUdgdr8h64":3},{"slug":4,"display_name":5,"profile_url":6,"plugin_count":7,"total_installs":8,"avg_security_score":9,"avg_patch_time_days":10,"trust_score":11,"computed_at":12,"plugins":13},"evansolomon","Evan Solomon","https:\u002F\u002Fprofiles.wordpress.org\u002Fevansolomon\u002F",6,170,85,30,84,"2026-05-19T22:37:49.361Z",[14,34,47,58,71,85],{"slug":15,"name":16,"version":17,"author":5,"author_profile":6,"description":18,"short_description":19,"active_installs":20,"downloaded":21,"rating":20,"num_ratings":22,"last_updated":23,"tested_up_to":24,"requires_at_least":25,"requires_php":26,"tags":27,"homepage":26,"download_link":30,"security_score":9,"vuln_count":31,"unpatched_count":31,"last_vuln_date":32,"fetched_at":33},"oembed-in-comments","oEmbed in Comments","1.1.2","\u003Cp>\u003Ca href=\"http:\u002F\u002Foembed.com\u002F\" rel=\"nofollow ugc\">oEmbed\u003C\u002Fa> is an easy way to embed media. It turns links into embedded content automatically. WordPress has supported it in posts for a while, but not in comments. This plugin uses the oEmbed support already in WordPress and adds it to comments.\u003C\u002Fp>\n","WordPress supports oEmbed, but only in post content. This adds oEmbed support to comments.",100,7885,14,"2013-08-13T17:43:00.000Z","3.4.2","3.4","",[28,29],"comments","oembed","https:\u002F\u002Fdownloads.wordpress.org\u002Fplugin\u002Foembed-in-comments.1.1.2.zip",0,null,"2026-04-16T10:56:18.058Z",{"slug":35,"name":36,"version":37,"author":5,"author_profile":6,"description":38,"short_description":39,"active_installs":10,"downloaded":40,"rating":20,"num_ratings":41,"last_updated":42,"tested_up_to":24,"requires_at_least":26,"requires_php":26,"tags":43,"homepage":26,"download_link":46,"security_score":9,"vuln_count":31,"unpatched_count":31,"last_vuln_date":32,"fetched_at":33},"internal-linking-for-scheduled-posts","Internal Linking For Scheduled Posts","1.01","\u003Cp>If you write posts scheduled for the future and want to link between them, this can help!  WordPress has a great, fast tool for linking to posts on your own site, but it only lists already-published posts.  Usually this makes sense, but if you do a lot of writing for the future via scheduled posts you may want to expand that.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch3>Contribute\u003C\u002Fh3>\n\u003Cp>The code is available on Github: \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fgithub.com\u002Fevansolomon\u002Fwp-scheduled-posts-internal-linking\" rel=\"nofollow ugc\">https:\u002F\u002Fgithub.com\u002Fevansolomon\u002Fwp-scheduled-posts-internal-linking\u003C\u002Fa>\u003C\u002Fp>\n","A very simple way to add scheduled posts to WordPress' internal linking system.",2916,1,"2012-07-13T07:09:00.000Z",[44,45],"internal-linking","scheduled-posts","https:\u002F\u002Fdownloads.wordpress.org\u002Fplugin\u002Finternal-linking-for-scheduled-posts.1.01.zip",{"slug":48,"name":49,"version":50,"author":5,"author_profile":6,"description":51,"short_description":52,"active_installs":53,"downloaded":54,"rating":31,"num_ratings":31,"last_updated":55,"tested_up_to":26,"requires_at_least":26,"requires_php":26,"tags":56,"homepage":26,"download_link":57,"security_score":9,"vuln_count":31,"unpatched_count":31,"last_vuln_date":32,"fetched_at":33},"admin-login-notifier","Admin Login Notifier","2.1","\u003Cp>Notify a site administrator when someone tries to login to the site as “admin” (the username).  The plugin saves the password the would-be login tried to use, which allows the site administrator to make fun of bots.  Attempted passwords can be seen in the WordPress dashboard and will be emailed to a site admin once per day.\u003C\u002Fp>\n","Notify a site administrator when someone tries to login to the site as \"admin\" (the username).  The plugin saves the password the would-be l &hellip;",10,3984,"2012-07-11T02:25:00.000Z",[],"https:\u002F\u002Fdownloads.wordpress.org\u002Fplugin\u002Fadmin-login-notifier.zip",{"slug":59,"name":60,"version":37,"author":5,"author_profile":6,"description":61,"short_description":62,"active_installs":53,"downloaded":63,"rating":20,"num_ratings":41,"last_updated":64,"tested_up_to":65,"requires_at_least":66,"requires_php":26,"tags":67,"homepage":26,"download_link":69,"security_score":9,"vuln_count":31,"unpatched_count":31,"last_vuln_date":32,"fetched_at":70},"debug-bar-toggle","Debug Bar Toggle","\u003Cp>The \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fwordpress.org\u002Fextend\u002Fplugins\u002Fdebug-bar\u002F\" rel=\"ugc\">Debug Bar\u003C\u002Fa> plugin is great, but sometimes I want to turn it off for a short time.  This plugin lets you do that with a keystroke (\u003Ccode>ctrl\u003C\u002Fcode> + \u003Ccode>d\u003C\u002Fcode>).\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>Each time you press the keystroke, it toggles the Debug Bar’s setting for your \u003Cem>next\u003C\u002Fem> request.  For example, if the Debug Bar is on and you press \u003Ccode>ctrl\u003C\u002Fcode> + \u003Ccode>d\u003C\u002Fcode>, then reload the page, it will not be loaded on the next pageview.  Press \u003Ccode>ctrl\u003C\u002Fcode> + \u003Ccode>d\u003C\u002Fcode> again, refresh, and it’s back.\u003C\u002Fp>\n","The Debug Bar plugin is great, but sometimes I want to turn it off for a short time.  This plugin lets you do that with a keystroke (ctrl + d).",1945,"2013-03-13T06:58:00.000Z","3.5.2","3.5",[68],"debug-bar","https:\u002F\u002Fdownloads.wordpress.org\u002Fplugin\u002Fdebug-bar-toggle.1.01.zip","2026-04-06T09:54:40.288Z",{"slug":72,"name":73,"version":74,"author":5,"author_profile":6,"description":75,"short_description":76,"active_installs":53,"downloaded":77,"rating":20,"num_ratings":41,"last_updated":78,"tested_up_to":65,"requires_at_least":25,"requires_php":26,"tags":79,"homepage":82,"download_link":83,"security_score":9,"vuln_count":31,"unpatched_count":31,"last_vuln_date":32,"fetched_at":84},"github-flavored-markdown-comments","GitHub-Flavored Markdown Comments","1.0","\u003Cp>Comment forms allow some HTML, this plugin extends that to let users type in \u003Ca href=\"http:\u002F\u002Fdaringfireball.net\u002Fprojects\u002Fmarkdown\u002F\" rel=\"nofollow ugc\">Markdown\u003C\u002Fa> and have it automatically converted to HTML.  It also extends Markdown with a couple features made popular \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fgithub.com\u002Fgithub\u002Fgithub-flavored-markdown\" rel=\"nofollow ugc\">by GitHub\u003C\u002Fa>.  Conversion from Markdown to HTML is completely automated and doesn’t require anything on the commenter’s part.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>The feature additions from GitHub are:\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cul>\n\u003Cli>Single linebreaks are treated as new paragraphs\u003C\u002Fli>\n\u003Cli>Code “fencing” with three backticks (“`)\u003C\u002Fli>\n\u003C\u002Ful>\n\u003Cp>Two notable features from GitHub’s Markdown implementation are missing:\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cul>\n\u003Cli>To do lists: Doing these well would require some front end interaction, which I decided is outside the scope of this plugin at least for now\u003C\u002Fli>\n\u003Cli>Repository autolinking (e.g. comments, issues, etc): These seemed a little \u003Cem>too\u003C\u002Fem> GitHub-specific.\u003C\u002Fli>\n\u003C\u002Ful>\n\u003Cp>GitHub-Flavored Markdown Comments is developed, unsurprisingly, \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fgithub.com\u002Fevansolomon\u002Fwp-github-flavored-markdown-comments\" rel=\"nofollow ugc\">on GitHub\u003C\u002Fa>.\u003C\u002Fp>\n","WordPress plugin to let commenters use (GitHub-flavored) Markdown, and turn it into HTML.",2435,"2013-03-08T06:48:00.000Z",[28,80,81],"github","markdown","https:\u002F\u002Fgithub.com\u002Fevansolomon\u002Fwp-github-flavored-markdown-comments","https:\u002F\u002Fdownloads.wordpress.org\u002Fplugin\u002Fgithub-flavored-markdown-comments.1.0.zip","2026-03-15T15:16:48.613Z",{"slug":86,"name":87,"version":88,"author":5,"author_profile":6,"description":89,"short_description":90,"active_installs":53,"downloaded":91,"rating":31,"num_ratings":31,"last_updated":92,"tested_up_to":65,"requires_at_least":66,"requires_php":26,"tags":93,"homepage":26,"download_link":96,"security_score":9,"vuln_count":31,"unpatched_count":31,"last_vuln_date":32,"fetched_at":33},"vertically-responsive-images","Vertically Responsive Images","1.1.1","\u003Cp>Usually when we talk about making something responsive, we mean horizontally.  But it’s annoying when tall images overflow a short laptop screen.  This resizes those images on the fly to fit the user’s window.  Optionally disable it for individual images by adding a \u003Ccode>do-not-resize\u003C\u002Fcode> class.\u003C\u002Fp>\n","Resize images on the fly to make sure the whole thing fits into the user's window.",1813,"2013-03-11T02:24:00.000Z",[94,95],"images","responsive","https:\u002F\u002Fdownloads.wordpress.org\u002Fplugin\u002Fvertically-responsive-images.1.1.1.zip"]