Contributors: gordonguthrie
Tags: graphs, tables, spreadsheets, charts, forms, quotation engines, post, page
Requires at least: 3.0.1
Tested up to: 3.4
Stable tag: 1.5
License: GPLv2 or later
License URI: http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-2.0.html
Lets you embed graphs and graphs, tables, spreadsheets, forms and quotation engines from the Vixo online spreadsheet.
You can now easily insert accounts and basic spreadsheets directly into your WordPress site - when the user changes them they automatically update without need to be republished in any way. Simply drop graphs and charts into your WordPress blog. When the underlying data is edited the graph or chart automatically updates. Tabular data is very common. You can now easily create and insert tables of data which the end user can sort or filter on your site. The Vixo spreadsheet lets you create simple forms that store information in an online spreadsheet and email you when someone submits data - making your life easier. Specialist quotation engines and calculators are a cinch with Vixo - they can be built easily in a spreadsheet and then published into your blog.- Upload
vixo-plugin-1.5.zip
to the/wp-content/plugins/
directory - Unzip it
- Activate the plugin through the 'Plugins' menu in WordPress
- Use the shortcode
[vixo url="http://example.com/some/page/"]
Vixo is a next generation spreadsheet - designed to be used on the internet - everything, graphs, forms, pages of figures, tables of data, has its own URL which you can pop into the Vixo shortcode. You can build sophisticated calculation and quotation engines and embed them as well.
Because everything in Vixo has a URL, The shortcode is very simple and has only two forms:
[vixo url="http://example.com/some/page"]
[vixo url="http://example.com/some/page", width="198px" height="100px"]
If it can the Vixo plugin will work out the size of the thing to be embedded automatically and resize to fit.
For a small number of cases (principally inserting tables) Vixo needs to be told how wide and high you want the embedded object to be. In this case use the long form and specify the width and height in pixels as per the example.
Yes
There is a free account for up to 500 cells - higher usage requires a paid account.
Yes, install the plugin and then use some of the example URL's in our tutorials, for instance this one
No
The documentation is very comprehensive.
It is designed to be fairly compatible with Excel, Libre Office and Google Spreadsheets - there are over 150 Excel-compatible functions.
A detailed comparison can be found here
We have a WordPress site to show off the plugin.
There are tutorials - with embedded live examples - for the following:
- graphs and charts
- sortable and filterable tabular data
- publishing basic spreadsheets on the web
- forms (with email notification on submission)
- specialist quotation engines and calculators
The plugin is hosted on Github.
Feel free to post any problems on the issues log
This readme was converted from WordPress markdown to GitHub markdown on http://wordpress-markdown-to-github-markdown.com/
Used this web service to synch the GitHub README.md with the WordPress readme.txt
Fixes in documentation and plugin embedding.
Two major bug fixes:
- use of unsafe jQuery expressions in previous version means that sites using native WordPress jQuery would fail to load spreadsheet elements
- failure to load native WordPress jQuery means themes that don't use jQuery would fail to load spreadsheet elements
Had 3 lines after '?>' leading to a 'The plugin generated 3 characters of unexected output during activation' error.
Turned off debugging by default
Initial release.
None