wp-block-themes
Use when developing WordPress block themes: theme.json (global settings/styles), templates and template parts, patterns, style variations, and Site Editor troubleshooting (style hierarchy, overrides, caching).
What this skill does
# WP Block Themes ## When to use Use this skill for block theme work such as: - editing `theme.json` (presets, settings, styles, per-block styles) - adding or changing templates (`templates/*.html`) and template parts (`parts/*.html`) - adding patterns (`patterns/*.php`) and controlling what appears in the inserter - adding style variations (`styles/*.json`) - debugging “styles not applying” / “editor doesn’t reflect theme.json” ## Inputs required - Repo root and which theme is targeted (theme directory if multiple exist). - Target WordPress version range (theme.json version and features vary by core version). - Where the issue manifests: Site Editor, post editor, frontend, or all. ## Procedure ### 0) Triage and locate block theme roots 1. Run triage: - `node skills/wp-project-triage/scripts/detect_wp_project.mjs` 2. Detect theme roots + key folders: - `node skills/wp-block-themes/scripts/detect_block_themes.mjs` If multiple themes exist, pick one and scope all changes to that theme root. ### 1) Create a new block theme (if needed) If you are creating a new block theme from scratch (or converting a classic theme): - Prefer starting from a known-good scaffold (or exporting from a WP environment) rather than guessing file layout. - Be explicit about the minimum supported WordPress version because `theme.json` schema versions differ. Read: - `references/creating-new-block-theme.md` After creating the theme root, re-run `detect_block_themes` and continue below. ### 2) Confirm theme type and override expectations - Block theme indicators: - `theme.json` present - `templates/` and/or `parts/` present - Remember the style hierarchy: - core defaults → theme.json → child theme → user customizations - user customizations can make theme.json edits appear “ignored” Read: - `references/debugging.md` (style hierarchy + fastest checks) ### 3) Make `theme.json` changes safely Decide whether you are changing: - **settings** (what the UI allows): presets, typography scale, colors, layout, spacing - **styles** (how it looks by default): CSS-like rules for elements/blocks Read: - `references/theme-json.md` ### 4) Templates and template parts - Templates live under `templates/` and are HTML. - Template parts live under `parts/` and must not be nested in subdirectories. Read: - `references/templates-and-parts.md` ### 5) Patterns Prefer filesystem patterns under `patterns/` when you want theme-owned patterns. Read: - `references/patterns.md` ### 6) Style variations Style variations are JSON files under `styles/`. Note: once a user picks a style variation, that selection is stored in the DB, so changing the file may not “update what the user sees” automatically. Read: - `references/style-variations.md` ## Verification - Site Editor reflects changes where expected (Styles UI, templates, patterns). - Frontend renders with expected styles. - If styles aren’t changing, confirm whether user customizations override theme defaults. - Run the repo’s build/lint scripts if assets are involved (fonts, custom JS/CSS build). ## Failure modes / debugging Start with: - `references/debugging.md` Common issues: - wrong theme root (editing an inactive theme) - user customizations override your defaults - invalid `theme.json` shape/typos prevent application - templates/parts in wrong folders (or nested parts) ## Escalation If upstream behavior is unclear, consult canonical docs: - Theme Handbook and Block Editor Handbook for `theme.json`, templates, patterns, and style variations.
Related in Web Dev
generating-lwc-components
IncludedLightning Web Components with PICKLES methodology and 165-point scoring. Use this skill when the user creates or edits LWC components, builds wire service patterns, or writes Jest tests for LWC. TRIGGER when: user creates/edits LWC components, touches lwc/**/*.js, .html, .css, .js-meta.xml files, or asks about wire service, SLDS, or Jest LWC tests. DO NOT TRIGGER when: Apex classes (use generating-apex), Aura components, or Visualforce.
tanstack-query
IncludedManage server state in React with TanStack Query v5. Set up queries with useQuery, mutations with useMutation, configure QueryClient caching strategies, implement optimistic updates, and handle infinite scroll with useInfiniteQuery. Use when: setting up data fetching in React projects, migrating from v4 to v5, or fixing object syntax required errors, query callbacks removed issues, cacheTime renamed to gcTime, isPending vs isLoading confusion, keepPreviousData removed problems.
document-processor-api
IncludedProcess documents with Nutrient DWS. Use when the user wants to generate PDFs from HTML or URLs, convert Office/images/PDFs, assemble or split packets, OCR scans, extract text/tables/key-value pairs, redact PII, watermark, sign, fill forms, optimize PDFs, or produce compliance outputs like PDF/A or PDF/UA. Triggers include convert to PDF, merge these PDFs, OCR this scan, extract tables, redact PII, sign this PDF, make this PDF/A, or linearize for web delivery.
nutrient-document-processing
IncludedProcess documents with Nutrient DWS. Use when the user wants to generate PDFs from HTML or URLs, convert Office/images/PDFs, assemble or split packets, OCR scans, extract text/tables/key-value pairs, redact PII, watermark, sign, fill forms, optimize PDFs, or produce compliance outputs like PDF/A or PDF/UA. Triggers include convert to PDF, merge these PDFs, OCR this scan, extract tables, redact PII, sign this PDF, make this PDF/A, or linearize for web delivery.
tanstack-query
IncludedManage server state in React with TanStack Query v5. Covers useMutationState, simplified optimistic updates, throwOnError, network mode (offline/PWA), and infiniteQueryOptions. Use when setting up data fetching, fixing v4→v5 migration errors (object syntax, gcTime, isPending, keepPreviousData), or debugging SSR/hydration issues with streaming server components.
accelint-nextjs-best-practices
IncludedNext.js performance optimization and best practices. Use when writing Next.js code (App Router or Pages Router); implementing Server Components, Server Actions, or API routes; optimizing RSC serialization, data fetching, or server-side rendering; reviewing Next.js code for performance issues; fixing authentication in Server Actions; or implementing Suspense boundaries, parallel data fetching, or request deduplication.