WordPress (10000 programs)
Pros: Prevents raw shortcode text after switching from a WooTheme. Includes multi-column, tabs, toggles and styled alert shortcodes. Works without requiring the original WooThemes to be active.
Cons: Closed on the official repository, limiting new-download availability. Developed before the block editor, so block workflow support is limited. Deactivating it exposes raw shortcode text in published content.
Pros: Per-page and per-post disabling for precise asset control. Global asset management to deactivate files site-wide. Supports assets enqueued by themes and third-party plugins. Bulk actions speed up optimization on large sites.
Cons: Disabling essential scripts can break page functionality. Requires careful testing after changes in an incognito window. Compatibility depends on themes using standard enqueue functions.
Pros: Blocks right-click and common keyboard copy shortcuts. Includes a ban mechanism for repeat bypass attempts. Dashboard configuration requires no coding knowledge. Does not block search engine indexing.
Cons: Does not stop highly technical scraping methods. Client-side measures alone are not a complete protection. Ban thresholds require careful setup to avoid false positives.
Pros: Mailbox-level checks validate addresses without sending test emails. Built-in support for Contact Form 7, WooCommerce, Gravity Forms, Ninja Forms. Dashboard reporting surfaces validation activity and rejection trends.
Cons: Requires a Byteplant API key and account setup. Functions at submission time, not designed for retrospective list cleaning. Depends on an external verification infrastructure for live checks.
Pros: Selects any registered Custom Post Type for calendar display. AJAX month navigation updates the view without full reloads. Shows post counts on calendar dates for immediate context. Supports multiple widget instances and developer hooks.
Cons: One post type per widget instance, no multi-type aggregation. Visual changes require CSS knowledge to fully customise. Specialised scope may not suit sites needing consolidated calendars.
Pros: Caches visited pages for offline access. Admin-selectable fallback for uncached requests. Stores CSS, JavaScript, and images for consistent rendering. Integrates with WordPress hooks and settings.
Cons: Primarily caches pages as users visit, not entire sites by default. Requires a valid SSL certificate (HTTPS) to function. Focused on offline content, not a complete PWA feature set.
Pros: Purpose-built for legal intake workflows and CRM alignment. Supports embedding platform-specific intake forms on WordPress pages. Forwards submissions so most client data remains in the CRM. Creates contacts and notifications within the intake platform.
Cons: Tied to the Lexicata / Clio Grow ecosystem, limiting cross-CRM use. Requires an active account and valid API key for full operation. Works with the platform's intake form structure, restricting third-party forms.
Pros: Front-end search bar dedicated to Media Library items. Supports common document formats: PDF, DOCX, XLSX. Simple shortcode for placement on any page or widget area. Search results display in a clean table with download links.
Cons: Does not index or search internal text inside PDF or document files. Search scope limited to Media Library entries, not full-text content.
Pros: Native .xlsx export preserves Excel-compatible formatting better than CSV. Selects any table, including custom tables from other plugins. One-click export integrated into the WordPress admin interface. Lightweight architecture minimizes added server processing load.
Cons: Large exports constrained by server PHP memory and execution time settings. Requires administrator-level access to run exports. No external transfer option; files are generated and downloaded locally.
Pros: Unified HTML5 audio and video engine for cross-browser playback. Supports YouTube, Vimeo, and SoundCloud integration. Advanced playlist management and shortcode generator for placement. Lightweight code footprint designed to maintain fast page loading.
Cons: Closed for new downloads on the official WordPress repository. Requires a self-hosted WordPress installation (WordPress.org).
Pros: Moves entire discussion threads including all replies. Bulk move via WordPress admin topic list. Zero-configuration activation integrates into bbPress interface. Lightweight codebase designed to limit performance impact.
Cons: Requires WordPress and an active bbPress installation. Moving topics between differing slugs can affect permalinks. Relocation depends on mover's permissions for private forums.
Pros: Automatically hides the default 'Comments are closed' notice on posts and pages. Plug-and-play activation with no configuration required. Lightweight code aims for minimal impact on page load times. Compatible with themes using standard WordPress comment functions.
Cons: Does not change comment settings or disabling behaviour. Limited to cosmetic suppression, not a template editor. Best results require themes that follow WordPress coding standards.
Pros: Stores analytics locally in the WordPress database. Provides real-time visitor counts and page view reports. Requires no configuration and shows compact dashboard widgets.
Cons: Writes analytics to the local database; monitor growth on high-traffic sites. Keyword data is limited and available only where search engines provide it. No built-in third-party analytics integrations for centralized reporting.
Pros: Sublime Text-inspired editing surface within the WordPress admin area. Stores custom CSS in the database and injects it into the header. Compatible with WordPress 4.0 or higher and most standard themes. Lightweight, focused plugin aimed at quick visual tweaks.
Cons: Standard version focuses on raw CSS, not preprocessor pipelines. Not positioned as a full build-tool replacement for complex workflows. Selector adjustments may be needed after switching themes. Feature set narrowly scoped to CSS editing, not asset pipelines.
Pros: Sends automated email alerts to the post author on new comments. Activates with minimal configuration and works immediately. Lightweight implementation reduces runtime impact compared with larger plugins. Integrates with WordPress' native comment hooks for standard setups.
Cons: Notifications target only the post author by default. No built-in granular rules for per-post or per-contact filtering. Compatibility can vary with highly customized third-party comment systems.
Pros: Suppresses comment-specific RSS link tags in the page head. Activates immediately with no configuration required. Small code footprint, designed to avoid performance impact.
Cons: Does not offer broader feed-management or aggregation controls. No configuration options for selective or conditional removal.