[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"$faxlkYDo_N22ZI7WZuzSsorYmtx3S9495wD0Iop0DHeE":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},"taupecat","Tracy Rotton","https:\u002F\u002Fprofiles.wordpress.org\u002Ftaupecat\u002F",5,290,85,30,84,"2026-04-04T17:00:43.826Z",[14,34,50,66,82],{"slug":15,"name":16,"version":17,"author":5,"author_profile":6,"description":18,"short_description":19,"active_installs":20,"downloaded":21,"rating":11,"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},"tc-custom-taxonomy-filter","TC Custom Taxonomy Filter","2.0.0","\u003Cp>Filter your posts (including custom post types) by your custom taxonomies, just like you can with WordPress’ native category filter.\u003C\u002Fp>\n","Filter your posts by your custom taxonomies.",100,9198,13,"2020-06-14T19:57:00.000Z","5.3.21","3.4","",[28,29],"custom-taxonomy","filter","https:\u002F\u002Fdownloads.wordpress.org\u002Fplugin\u002Ftc-custom-taxonomy-filter.2.0.0.zip",0,null,"2026-03-15T15:16:48.613Z",{"slug":35,"name":36,"version":17,"author":5,"author_profile":6,"description":37,"short_description":38,"active_installs":39,"downloaded":40,"rating":31,"num_ratings":31,"last_updated":41,"tested_up_to":42,"requires_at_least":43,"requires_php":44,"tags":45,"homepage":48,"download_link":49,"security_score":9,"vuln_count":31,"unpatched_count":31,"last_vuln_date":32,"fetched_at":33},"flipboard-magazine-widget","Flipboard Magazine Widget","\u003Cp>This plugin turns Flipboard widgets into true WordPress widgets.  All you have\u003Cbr \u002F>\nto do is enter the magazine’s URL, and this plugin handles the rest!  No need to\u003Cbr \u002F>\nworry about copying and pasting the Flipboard-generated code, and the required\u003Cbr \u002F>\nJavaScript is handled in the appropriate WordPress way.\u003C\u002Fp>\n","Add a Flipboard magazine widget (https:\u002F\u002Fshare.flipboard.com\u002F) to your sidebar",90,6029,"2020-06-14T15:28:00.000Z","5.4.19","3.8.1","5.3.0",[46,47],"flipboard","widget","https:\u002F\u002Fgithub.com\u002Ftaupecat\u002Fflipboard-magazine-widget","https:\u002F\u002Fdownloads.wordpress.org\u002Fplugin\u002Fflipboard-magazine-widget.2.0.0.zip",{"slug":51,"name":52,"version":17,"author":5,"author_profile":6,"description":53,"short_description":54,"active_installs":55,"downloaded":56,"rating":39,"num_ratings":57,"last_updated":58,"tested_up_to":42,"requires_at_least":59,"requires_php":44,"tags":60,"homepage":64,"download_link":65,"security_score":9,"vuln_count":31,"unpatched_count":31,"last_vuln_date":32,"fetched_at":33},"tc-comment-out","TC Comment Out","\u003Cp>Easily comment out page and post content using a shortcode.  Content is commented out using HTML comment syntax, keeping the content available in the “View Source” window of your web browser.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>Simply place the opening shortcode [comment] at the beginning of the text you wish to comment out, and the closing shortcode [\u002Fcomment] at the end.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>If you wish to hide the content entirely from view (so that it is \u003Cem>not\u003C\u002Fem> visible in the browser source), set the optional type attribute to “hidden”. Setting the type attribute to “html” will produce the default behavior, but is not required.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cpre>\u003Ccode>[comment]This text will be commented out with HTML comments.[\u002Fcomment]\n\n[comment type=\"hidden\"]This text will not even be sent to the browser.[\u002Fcomment]\n\u003C\u002Fcode>\u003C\u002Fpre>\n","Comment out page and post content using a shortcode.",70,5806,2,"2020-06-14T01:45:00.000Z","2.5",[61,62,63],"comment-out","hide-content","shortcode","http:\u002F\u002Fwww.taupecat.com\u002Fwordpress-plugins\u002Ftc-comment-out\u002F","https:\u002F\u002Fdownloads.wordpress.org\u002Fplugin\u002Ftc-comment-out.2.0.0.zip",{"slug":67,"name":68,"version":69,"author":5,"author_profile":6,"description":70,"short_description":71,"active_installs":72,"downloaded":73,"rating":31,"num_ratings":31,"last_updated":74,"tested_up_to":42,"requires_at_least":75,"requires_php":44,"tags":76,"homepage":80,"download_link":81,"security_score":9,"vuln_count":31,"unpatched_count":31,"last_vuln_date":32,"fetched_at":33},"tc-disable-browser-upgrade-warning","TC Disable Browser Upgrade Warning","2.0.1","\u003Cp>WordPress 3.2 introduced a new dashboard widget that warns you if you’re not using the latest version of your chosen browser. While some may find this useful, if your clients\u002Fcontributors\u002Fother interested parties cannot upgrade their browser for whatever reason (or simply choose not to), you can disable this warning across the board rather than scare them with warning messages they have no power to control.\u003C\u002Fp>\n","WordPress plugin that removes the \"Your Browser Is Out of Date\" warning in the administration dashboard.",20,2558,"2020-06-15T23:11:00.000Z","3.2",[77,78,79],"browser","browser-nag","dashboard","https:\u002F\u002Fgithub.com\u002Ftaupecat\u002Ftc-disable-browser-upgrade-warning","https:\u002F\u002Fdownloads.wordpress.org\u002Fplugin\u002Ftc-disable-browser-upgrade-warning.2.0.1.zip",{"slug":83,"name":84,"version":85,"author":5,"author_profile":6,"description":86,"short_description":87,"active_installs":88,"downloaded":89,"rating":31,"num_ratings":31,"last_updated":90,"tested_up_to":91,"requires_at_least":25,"requires_php":26,"tags":92,"homepage":26,"download_link":94,"security_score":9,"vuln_count":31,"unpatched_count":31,"last_vuln_date":32,"fetched_at":33},"tc-specify-search-form","TC Specify Search Form","1.0","\u003Cp>By default, the “Search” widget in WordPress will include the searchform.php template file in your theme (if it exists), or the search code in wp-includes\u002Fgeneral-template.php (if it doesn’t). However, if you want a distinctive search form (or forms!) to use as a widget, this allows you to enter it in using the “searchform-identifier.php” format that you can use to distinguish other templates elsewhere in your theme.  You just have to have that file set up in your theme with the HTML you want to use.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>Example: If you want to have a distinct searchform file specifically for your widgets, create the template file and call it something like “searchform-widget.php” (what goes between the dash and the dot is up to you, so long as it meets filename requirements). In the “Template” field of the widget settings, enter only “widget”, and that searchform file will be called in your widget automagically.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>Note: Actually coding the search form is up to you. That requires some theming skillz, but I have confidence in you!\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>To Do: Make a short-code version of this, for use in pages and posts.\u003C\u002Fp>\n","Replaces the default WordPress \"Search\" widget with one that will use a customized searchform template in your theme.",10,2466,"2015-08-15T02:23:00.000Z","4.3.34",[93,47],"search-form","https:\u002F\u002Fdownloads.wordpress.org\u002Fplugin\u002Ftc-specify-search-form.1.1.zip"]