Web hosting company - and Chris s Commenter Heat Map plug-in (www.chrisjdavis.org/hacks/1.5/ cjd_comment_heat.zip).

and Chris s Commenter Heat Map plug-in (www.chrisjdavis.org/hacks/1.5/ cjd_comment_heat.zip). After you download these two plug-ins you need to place the *.php files in your Plugins folder located at wp-content/plugins/. After you have done so, load /wp-admin/plugins.php in your browser and activate it. When you load the Plugins Manager, things are pretty straightforward. Find CJD Comment Heat and SRG Clean Archives and click Activate in the right column for each one. You re now ready to move on to the next step. But before we go on, we ll talk a little bit about what each of these plug-ins does. CJD Comment Heat In a nutshell, CJD Comment Heat creates a heat map of the comments that have been made to your site. You can see an example of this plug-in at work on Chris s site: www.chrisjdavis.org/archive/#heat. As you can see, the image, powered by Gravatars (http://gravatar.com), becomes bigger when there are more comments made. If you mouse over the image, you ll see a tooltip telling you how many comments a user has made. SRG Clean Archives Clean Archives from Shawn Grimes is a plug-in that gives a clean, straightforward look at archives, broken out by month. You can see it in action over at Shawn s site: www.sporadicnonsense.com/archives/. Using the plug-ins First things first. Every custom template must start with the following code (this file is called new_archive.php): We call for our header.php file and start adding our content:

Here are the archives for .

Search the archives.

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WordPress database error: [Table 'armadillowebhosting_com_-_apache.wp_comments' doesn't exist]
SELECT * FROM wp_comments WHERE comment_post_ID = '278' AND comment_approved = '1' ORDER BY comment_date

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