Email Post Activation

Email Post Activation

paulmac

WordPress allows posting via email, but must be told to check for emails. This is achieved by calling wp-mail.php using either a cron job, or by including a hidden iframe in your blog footer.

This plugin adds the iframe to the blog footer without editing the theme – updating your theme won’t break your ability to email in posts to WordPress.

I don’t see anything in my blog. Where is the iframe?

The iframe used to call the wp-mail.php file is hidden. Its width and height have been set to 0. If you want to check that the plugin has loaded correctly:

  1. Right click in your browser window.
  2. Click View Source from the pop-up menu.
  3. Scroll to the bottom of the page and look for a line that looks something like this:

<iframe src=”http://www.myblog.com/myblog/wp-mail.php” name=”mailiframe” width=”0″ height=”0″ frameborder=”0″ scrolling=”no” title=””>

I activated the plugin, and I still don’t see anything. Are you sure this works?

Yes, I’m sure it works 🙂

If you’re using caching on your site, such as WP Super Cache, then you may have to clear the cache before you can see the code.

How do I set up posting via email?

You can read more about Blogging by Email at https://codex.wordpress.org/Blog_by_Email on the WordPress Documentation site.

  1. Upload email-post-activation.php to your WordPress plugins folder.
  2. Activate the plugin via the WordPress Plugins page.

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  • Version: 1.0
  • Last updated: 15 years ago
  • Active installations: 20
  • WordPress version: 1.5
  • Tested up to: 2.7.1
  • PHP version: false