Realizing he could use WordPress as a backend and build a sleek, decoupled frontend using Vue.js. The Deployment
By hour 36, the site was flying. He used to find a slow database call and optimized it with a custom transient. When he handed the keys to the client, they were thrilled. They could upload content easily, and Elias knew the underlying architecture was clean, version-controlled, and scalable. WordPress for Web Developers: An Introduction f...
The sun hadn't even touched the horizon when Elias cracked his third energy drink. To the outside world, Elias was a "web developer"—a title that usually meant wrestling with React hooks, optimizing SQL queries, and debating the merits of Tailwind CSS. But today, his challenge was different. A high-value client needed a site launched in 48 hours, and they needed to be able to edit the blog posts themselves. Realizing he could use WordPress as a backend
Elias quickly learned that WordPress wasn't just a blogging platform; it was a headless-ready, API-driven content management framework. He stopped looking at the dashboard and started looking at the file structure. He saw the wp-content folder—his new playground. He realized that by creating a , he could inherit the security and stability of a parent theme while writing his own custom logic. Mastering the Loop When he handed the keys to the client, they were thrilled