Block audit: Verse #8336
Labels
[Feature] Blocks
Overall functionality of blocks
[Status] In Progress
Tracking issues with work in progress
[Type] Task
Issues or PRs that have been broken down into an individual action to take
Note: We'll be doing these audits in waves and editing this as we work through the blocks, so this text will be updated and fleshed out as we progress. See the full picture here.
Overview
Name: Verse
Description: A block for haiku? Why not? Blocks for all the things! (See what we did here?)
Category: Formatting
CSS class:
wp-block-verse
in frontend and editorCan be converted to: paragraph
States
Empty:

Selected:

Unselected:

Placeholder:

Primary (toolbar) settings
Align left, centre, right, bold, italic, strikethrough
Secondary (sidebar) settings
Advanced: Additional CSS Class
Frontend appearance
Gutenberg starter theme:
Atomic Blocks
twentyseventeen:
twentyten:
Documentation
No devdocs in https://github.com/WordPress/gutenberg/tree/master/core-blocks/verse
Suggestion for user-facing docs:
Performance on mobile
Accessibility
Bugs/errors
Individual issues will be opened for these soon
Suggestions
Individual issues will be opened for these soon
This one makes me even more confused about what the preformatted block is for.
Placeholder doesn't fit with other placeholders, stylistically.
Should there be an option for a link in there as well, for consistency with other text blocks?
Why call it "Verse" instead of "Poem"? The latter seems more descriptive.
The slash inserter pops up a verse block if you type "poetry", but not if you type "poem".
Not sure the pencil icon best represents this block. The pencil represents an action, whereas most of the block icons represent a visual abstraction of the actual block's appearance.
In a lot of themes, preformatted and verse blocks look exactly the same. (This is because they both use the
pre
element, and neither ships with default styles.)The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: