Calendarize it NULLED Plugin is a powerful and customizable WordPress calendar plugin. The plugin’s views include a Calendar Month view, a Calendar Week view, a Calendar Day view, a Calendar Grid view, a Calendar Map view, and a Calendar Year view. In addition to many more, such as the Flat UI Calendar Widget and the Upcoming Events Widget with Accordion. Month View, Week View, Day View, Event List View, Event Grid View, Event Map View, and Year View all have highly adaptable navigation structures.
Since WordPress 5.x, the Block Editor (Gutenberg) has been a part of the platform, and Calendarize! 4.9.x has been updated to work with it. However, the Classic Editor version of Calendarize it! is still usable. The newest release is WordPress 5.6-friendly as well.
The WPBakery Page Builder (formerly known as Visual Composer) is compatible with Calendarize! We provide 39 building blocks that facilitate the creation of your own templates. Using our shortcode and extensive properties, you can integrate Calendarize it! with almost any other popular page and style builder in place of WPBakery Page Builder.
Check out Calendarize.it, our sample site, to see how everything works.
Sign up as: DemoUser
Code: TryMeNow
Keep in mind that after installing Calendarize it NULLED Plugin, you may access the plugin’s add-ons—both free and premium—from the wp-admin section of your site.
More than 800 different Google Fonts are available for use in the CSS Editor. The Calendar’s aesthetic components are very customizable. Ten sample color schemes are provided for your convenience.
Keep in mind that after installing Calendarize, you may access the plugin’s add-ons—both free and premium—from the wp-admin section of your site.
Visit our demo site, Calendarize.it, and go to the add-ons menu to learn more about each of our premium-priced add-ons.
Please use the Codecanyon item’s comments area to ask us anything you’d want to know about calendarizing it! If you are already using Calendarize it! and are having trouble, please contact us at [email protected] or visit our Help Center, and we will do our best to resolve the problem for you.
Changelog
Released on December 3, 2022, version 4.9.998.101115
When using PHP 8 or later, the month of September is now correctly spelled.
Long lines are no longer appropriately folded in ical format, a previously reported bug.
Released on March 15, 2022, version 4.9.994.100122
Calendarize it! now works properly with WordPress installations in time zones that observe daylight saving time. Some time zones may display an incorrect time when using the local_tz option. The present has a revised.a.js file that processes both data and time.
Released on February 9, 2022, version 4.9.992.100152
The problem with the TwentyTwentyTwo (FSE) theme’s compatibility with Gutenberg and the front end’s calendar has been resolved.
Fix for incompatibility: the calendar event title does not load in the preview after upgrading to WordPress 5.9.
Date: October 13, 2021 Version: 4.9.99.99795
Parameter made mandatory after being optional in PHP 8; compatibility fix Set the object definition before property assignment.
Revision: Turn off the static list setting by default.
Remove all debugging code and update.
The 4.9.92.98002 release date is October 21, 2020.
Error fixed: the German translation was invalid. Rapid MOPO translation saw yyyy become jjjj and dddd become tttt. Because of this, WordPress’s Weekdays and Year functions were corrupted when the German language was selected.
Newer versions of WordPress fix an issue where repeating patterns are reset in the user interface but not in the actual stored data.
The newest version of WordPress now correctly displays the event’s title in the Calendar meta box when entering a date (Gutenberg).
Calendar duplication for several recurring events has been resolved.
Released on October 29, 2019: Version 4.9.1.94477
There will no longer be duplicates in the Event Grid View for events with very lengthy durations.
The update attribute on the Event Details Page in WordPress was showing the wrong UTC date when the timezone was set to UTC.
Fix for a JavaScript issue that occurred when date_options was null
Private events in the calendar should now be visible by default at the administrator and Editor levels.
The jQuery.data method is not working properly because of a conflict with a third-party plugin.
The pre-loader’s CSS style has been upgraded.
Betterment: load event content using rhc_content (with post_id as a parameter). Any post content (asked for by the consumer) is successfully loaded.
Released on July 25, 2019: Version 4.9.0.92833
The JavaScript problem while loading footer scripts has been fixed.
Problems with the REST API have been resolved. When I tried to install the Calendarize it! plugin after upgrading to WordPress 5.2, I received a PHP error. Prevent in Gutenberg.
Event Grid View (an add-on) now correctly displays duplicates for events with very lengthy durations.
The update attribute on the page detailing an event no longer displays the wrong UTC date when the WordPress timezone is UTC.
Corrected a Bug: When date_options is null, JavaScript throws an error.
Change: revised CSS for the x symbol when repeating events are not included.
The Events custom post type is now visible under Appearance > Menus, so you can add it to your menus.
Released on December 18, 2018: Version 4.8.1.86692
Fix for incompatibility: turn off Gutenberg and WordPress SEO (Yoast) while using WPBakery Page Builder and Calendarize it! The window for selecting a date and time for the event is not displayed.
Some websites’ rdate events in an older format caused Arbitrary Repeat events to disappear (unless the host manually updated the missing end date for the Arbitrary Event). This issue has been fixed.
Disabling the Block Editor (Gutenberg) is now an option under the Troubleshooting menu. If a third-party plugin is responsible for Calendarize It! not working, this will help you figure out what’s wrong.
12 December 2018: Version 4.8.0.86623
WordPress 5.0’s Block Editor (Gutenberg) is incompatible with the previous versions’ implementations of the Venue, Organizer, and Calendar taxonomies and custom taxonomy meta boxes.
When utilizing the new Block Editor (Gutenberg) in WordPress 5.0, the event images are not being saved.
The new Block Editor (Gutenberg) in WordPress 5.0 prevents the correct saving of Event Metadata.
We’ve added the ability to specify a start and end time for your arbitrary repeat events, as well as the ability to adjust the event’s length in days (RDATE) by moving its right boundary.
Calendarize it! is a brand new addition. Gutenberg’s block. Calendarize it! has full compatibility with all of its properties.
The Upcoming Events Block and the Accordion Upcoming Events Block have both been added as new features to Gutenberg.