Administration Panels
From 워드프레스(WORDPRESS) 한국어 위키
Introduction
관리자 패널은 (http://your-wordpress-url/wp-admin/에 위치함) 블로그를 관리할 수 있는 곳입니다. 어떤 패널에 들어가더라도 상단에는 자신의 블로그명과 링크가 표시되어있습니다.
다음은 워드프레스에 기본적으로 나타나는 패널 목록입니다. 원하는 링크를 누르면 그 패널과 딸려있는 서브패널에 대한 설명을 볼 수 있습니다.
The Dashboard
Dashboard는 블로그의 최근 글, 댓글 등의 내역과 워드프레스 소식 등을 전해줍니다.
Latest Activity
Latest Activity 박스는 블로그의 최근 상태에 관한 간단하고 편리한 정보, 링크 등을 보여줍니다. 다음과 같은 항목들을 보여줍니다.
- Posts
- 최근 5개 글들의 목록과 링크
- Scheduled Entries
- 앞으로 공개가 될 글들의 목록과 링크
- Comments
- 최근 5개 댓글들의 목록과 링크
- The Moderation Queue
- 승인이 필요한 댓글들의 갯수와 링크, (Administration > Options > Discussion 참고).
- Blog Stats
- 블로그의 간략한 통계, 글의 갯수, 댓글의 갯수, 카테고리의 갯수
WordPress Development Blog
The Dashboard lists "the latest news from the official WordPress development blog." Here you can find out what the WordPress developers have been up to recently and keep up with the latest WordPress related news. In addition to software developments such as version announcements and security notices, news about the WordPress community in general is sometimes posted here.
Other WordPress News
Titles of posts and links to other blogs related to the the WordPress community.
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SubPanels
Write Post
Write Page
Write - Make some content
블로그를 계정에 문제없이 설치했다면 이미 글을 쓸 준비가 된 것입니다! Write 패널에서는 블로그에서 보여질 글을 쓸 수 있습니다.
Write 패널에서는 새로운 글이나 쪽을 작성할 수 있습니다. 또 이미 써놓았던 글, 쪽을 편집할 수도 있습니다. 아마 블로그 관리자라면 Write 패널에서 가장 오랜 시간을 보내는게 당연하겠죠?
Write Post
Write > Write Post 서브패널에서는 새로운 글을 쓰거나 써놓았지만 공개하지 않았던 글을 편집할 수 있습니다.
Write Page
쪽은 글과 아주 비슷합니다. 하지만 글들은 블로그에서 시간적으로 배치되는 반면, 쪽은 시간적인 순서에 무관하게 배치됩니다. 즉 글과는 별개로 나타나게 하는 것입니다. Write > Write Page 서브패널에서는 새로운 쪽을 작성할 수 있습니다.
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Manage - Change your content
All of the actual content of your site can be managed through this admin panel. From here you can see lists of all your Posts, Pages, and Categories and edit or view anything in those lists. On this page you can also edit your Templates and other files used by your blog, Import content from various sources, and Export you blog.
Posts
Upon visiting the Manage Panel, WordPress defaults to the Manage Posts SubPanel. On this SubPanel you can edit and delete existing posts.
Pages
Pages are like posts but "live outside of the normal blog chronology" as you are reminded when you visit the Manage Pages SubPanel. Most everything here at the Manage Pages SubPanel is essentially the same as at the Manage Posts SubPanel. But there are a few noteworthy differences. So go check it out.
Uploads
Using the Upload Administration Panel, users can edit information and delete uploads that were previously uploaded via the Upload option when writing Posts and Pages. Note that the Miscellaneous Options SubPanel, Uploading, describes the location and structure of the upload directory.
Categories
Each Post and Link in WordPress is filed under one or more categories. This aids in navigation and allows Posts and Links to be grouped with others of similar nature.
Each category may be assigned to a Category Parent so that you may set up a hierarchy within the category structure. In creating categories, recognize that each category name must be unique. Thus, even if two categories have two different parents, they must still have different names.
Links to your categories are, by default, shown in two different places on your weblog (assuming you are using the default Kubrick theme). First, WordPress lists these category links in your sidebar. Second, WordPress shows all the categories to which a given post belongs under that of that post. When someone viewing your weblog clicks on one of these category links, a page with all the posts belonging to that category will be displayed.
The Manage Categories SubPanel allows you to create new categories, edit or delete existing ones, and organize your categories hierarchically.
Files
There are many user editable files in a standard WordPress installation. Examples include your theme templates, .htaccess, and my-hacks.php. In the Manage Files SubPanel, these files can be accessed and modified to suit your needs.
Import
WordPress currently supports importing data in the form of posts (articles) and most of the details or features supported by the existing software, from the following content publishing platforms. The details on importing are described in Importing Content.
Export
WordPress Export will create an XML file for you to save to your computer. The format, which is called a WordPress eXtended RSS or WXR file, will contain your posts, comments, custom fields, and categories.
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SubPanels
Comments
Awaiting Moderation
Comments
Comments are a feature of blogs which allow readers to respond to posts. Typically readers simply provide their own thoughts regarding the content of the post, but users may also provide links to other resources, generate discussion, or simply compliment the author for a well-written post.
Comments can be controlled and regulated through the use of filters for language and content, and often times can be queued for approval before they are visible on the web site. This is useful in dealing with comment spam.
Comments
In the Comments SubPanel you can modify or delete content found in comments to your posts. Defining rules about who can write comments and how comments are moderated is done elsewhere. See Discussion SubPanel.
Awaiting Moderation
The Awaiting Moderation SubPanel handles comments which have been marked for moderation. These are those which WordPress has decided might be spam (to define how WordPress decides this, see Discussion SubPanel). Such comments are not displayed on your site until you approve them (or until another user with the authority does so).
The menu tab for this SubPanel tells you how many comment WordPress has marked for moderation. So if the menu tab reads "Awaiting Moderation (0)", you don't even have to visit this SubPanel.
When the "0" changes to some other number, you'll need to go to this SubPanel and moderate the comments you find here. Each comment in the Awaiting Moderation SubPanel can be approved, or deleted.
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SubPanels
Manage Blogroll
Add Link
Import Links
Blogroll - Putting the Inter in the Internet
지금까지 배운 내용으로 블로그를 사용하는데 큰 문제는 없습니다. 하지만 아직까지 당신의 블로그는 웹에서 ‘작은 나뭇가지의 가장 끝’에 위치하고 있을 뿐입니다. 당신이 자주 방문하는 다른 블로그, Flickr, 미니홈피, 기타 웹사이트 등을 링크하게 된다면, 블로그를 방문하는 사용자들 역시 당신의 관심사에 대해서 알 수 있고, 거미줄과 같은 웹의 한 구성원이 될 수 있습니다.
워드프레스는 이런 링크를 쉽게 관리하고, 나타낼 수 있는 기능을 갖고 있습니다. 여러 범주로 링크들을 분류하여 관리할 수 있습니다. XFN이라는 기능을 통해 링크된 웹사이트와 당신의 관계를 설정할 수도 있습니다. 링크마다 작은 이미지를 설정할 수도 있고, 링크별로 점수를 매길 수도 있습니다.
복잡해보이지만 여러 서브패널을 이용하면 쉽게 따라할 수 있으니 걱정하지마세요.
Manage Blogroll
Manage Blogroll 서브패널은 링크를 관리하기 위한 곳입니다. 추가해놓았던 링크의 목록을 원하는 방법으로 정렬, 필터링해서 알아볼 수 있고, 편집을 할 수도 있습니다.
Add Link
Add Link 서브패널에서는 새로운 링크를 추가할 수 있습니다.
Link Categories
Link Categories 서브패널에서는 링크의 갈래를 관리를 합니다. 새로운 갈래를 만들거나, 기존의 갈래를 편집, 갈래의 순서 조정을 할 수 있습니다.
Import Links
추가를 해야할 링크가 굉장히 많나요? RSS 리더기에 있는 블로그들을 모두 워드프레스에 추가하고 싶나요? Import Links 서브패널에서는 그러한 링크들을 한번에 가져올 수 있습니다.
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SubPanels
Your Profile
Authors & Users
Plugins - Add Functionality to your Blog
Plugins allow you to add new features to your WordPress blog that don't come standard with the default installation. There are a rich variety of Available Plugins for WordPress, and with the following SubPanels, plugin installation and management is a snap.
Plugins
The Plugins SubPanel allows you to view the plugins you've downloaded and choose which plugins you want activated on your site. For information on downloading and installing plugins, see Managing Plugins.
Plugin Editor
Using the Plugin Editor SubPanel, you can modify the source code of all your plugins. This SubPanel behaves precisely like the Manage Files SubPanel. As with editing files from the Manage Files SubPanel, you should probably only use this built-in editor if you don't have any other option.
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SubPanels
Themes
Theme Editor
Current Theme Options
Presentation - Change the Look of your Blog
From the Presentation Administration Panel you can control how the content of your weblog is displayed. WordPress allows you to easily style your site with Themes.
Themes
From the Themes SubPanel you can choose which of the Themes you have already downloaded will be used for your site. See Using Themes for information on dowloading and activating Themes.
Widgets
From the Widgets SubPanel you can add, delete, and configure, Widgets for your sidebar (or sidebars). The Widgets SubPanel details the information on managing your Widgets.
Theme Editor
The Theme Editor SubPanel is used to edit the source code of the various files associated with your Themes. It behaves precisely like the Manage Files SubPanel with the addition of:
- Select theme to edit
- Use this dropdown to select the theme whose source code you wish to edit.
- Select
- After clicking this button, the files associated with the theme you selected from the dropdown will be listed to the right of the large text editing box. You can then select a file from that list for editing.
As with editing files from the Manage Files SubPanel, you should probably only use this built-in editor if you don't have any other option.
For more information about the source code used for Themes, see Theme Development, Templates and the page on Template Tags.
Header Image and Color
The Header Image and Color Options allows you to manage the look and feels of a Theme's header. This option will only be present if certain Themes are active. The Header Image and Color SubPanel describes the details of this feature.
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SubPanels
Authors & Users
Your Profile
Users - Your Blogging Family
Every blog probably has at least two users: admin, the account initially set up by WordPress, and the user account you, as the author/owner of the blog, use to write posts. But maybe you want more; perhaps you want several authors for your blog. If you want a person to be able to post to your blog, that person must have access to a user account; typically, every person will have her or his own user account.
At the Users Administration Panel, you can set up all of the user accounts you need. An important administrative feature here is the Roles feature. Depending on their Role, different users have different Capabilities. Briefly, a user can be assigned the following Roles: Administrator, Editor, Author, Contributor, or Subscriber.
You can also specify your and others' personal information such as name, e-mail, etc. from the User Administration Panel.
Authors & Users
You can create new users and manage the accounts of all your site's users at the Authors and Users SubPanel.
Your Profile
The Your Profile SubPanel is the default SubPanel for the User Administration Panel. Here you can specify your name and how it will be displayed on your site, your e-mail address (for administrative purposes) and other personal information.
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SubPanels
General
Writing
Reading
Privacy
Discussion
Permalinks
Miscellaneous
Options - Configuration Settings
지금까지 한 것들은 블로그에서의 '사용자', '글' 등과 같은 특정 부분만을 위한 설정이었습니다. 하지만 Options 패널에서는 블로그의 운영에 필요한 전반적인 설정을 합니다. 블로그의 이름이나, 영구주소, RSS Feed 등에 대한 설정을 할 수 있습니다.
You might think, "All these other things I've been doing so far at the Administration Panels have involved 'Options'. Are these 'Options' any different?" The answer would be, "Yes." All the settings you've encountered in the other Administration Panels have dealt with very specific parts of your site, or have been of limited scope (only applying to one Category, for example). In the Options Administration Panel are all of the settings that define your weblog as a whole: settings which determine how your site behaves, how you interact with your site, and how the rest of the world interacts with your site.
The following SubPanels control these settings.
General
The General Options SubPanel is the default SubPanel in the Options Administration Panel and controls some of the most basic configuration settings for your site: your site's title and location, who may register an account at your blog, and how dates and times are calculated and displayed.
Writing
Using the Writing Options SubPanel, you can control the interface with which you write new posts. These settings control both WordPress' included Write Post SubPanel and the optional Writing by e-mail feature.
Reading
The options in the Reading Options SubPanel are few in number, but still important. You can decide if you want posts, or a "static" Page, displayed as your blog's front (main) page. You can also adjust how many posts are displayed on that main page. In addition, you can adjust syndication feed features to determine how the information from your site is sent to a reader's web browser or other applications.
Discussion
The Discussion Options SubPanel allows you to set options concerning incoming and outgoing comments, pingbacks and trackbacks. You can also control from this SubPanel the circumstances under which your blog sends you e-mail notifying you about the goings on at your site.
Privacy
The Privacy Options SubPanel control your blog visibility to search engines such as Google and Technorati. You can decide if you would like your blog to be visible to everyone, including search engines (like Google, Sphere, Technorati) and archivers. If you don't want your blog available to the search engines you can block search engines, but allow normal visitors to see your site.
Permalinks
For a nice introduction to Permalinks, check out the Pretty Permalinks section of Introduction to Blogging. But briefly, and to quote the Permalinks Options SubPanel itself:
By default WordPress uses web URIs which have question marks and lots of numbers in them, however WordPress offers you the ability to create a custom URI structure for your permalinks and archives. This can improve the aesthetics, usability, and longevity of your links.
This SubPanel controls how that custom URI structure is defined. For a more in depth description of the way this structure is specified, see the Using Permalinks page.
Miscellaneous
WordPress has so many features, that some of them defy categorization. Features like file uploads, link tracking and support for custom "hacks" can be controlled from the Miscellaneous Options SubPanel.
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Sign Out
The Sign Out link is found at the top right corner in the Administration Panels. It is simply a link that will log you out from your WordPress blog.
When you sign-in (login) to your blog, WordPress stores a so called "cookie" in your web browser. This cookie allows WordPress to remember who you are; if you leave your blog's site for a while but come back to it later, WordPress will see the cookie and not require you to login again.
However, the cookie cannot tell WordPress who is using the WordPress; in other words, WordPress has no way of looking back at you through your monitor to determine if you are really you. If you have a WordPress cookie set in your web browser, anyone using your computer can access the Administration Panels of your blog. If you don't want this to happen (perhaps you are using a public computer or a computer which other people use), you can click this Sign Out link, and WordPress will delete the cookie from your web browser.
You can, of course, log back in at some later time.
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