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We start with some basic, simple application templates…
PZ comes with a simple project managers, CRM, to-do list, and so on. For each, there are tables for adding and editing data, forms with input fields that do the things you’d expect (make sure there’s an “at sign” in their email address, that sort of thing).
Oh, and each form is a WordPress “block,” so you can insert copies of this form wherever you need them on your site.
Or build yourself a form to gather exactly what you need…
Forms are built with fields just like in other WordPress forms packages, but each field is a block, just a regular block that you can insert wherever you like. Really.
Customize your applications using the WordPress page builder.
We like the clean, uncluttered look that PeakZebra comes with, but each page of an application is secretly a regular WordPress page. This means you can add whatever content and design elements you’d around the application components.
The editor is visual and, again, you don’t need any special WordPress knowledge to modify pages with it.
And yes, we build in some guardrails.
Display your data in modern, interactive data grids…
Lightning fast refresh as you scroll through your data. Sort by clicking column headers. Drag columns into the order of your choice. You can even edit rows in place.
Behind the scenes, a prebuilt set of business app data tables…
We just had this feeling you’d probably want to store a customer’s email address, the line items on an invoice, the due date for task.
Since we know what the core fields and tables are, every new form or capability we build into PZ (plus all the ones we’ve already built) see the same data and inherently interact with each other.
And yes, you can add that extra field we didn’t think of.
PeakZebra is dedicated to helping you build cool, React-based applications on WordPress systems. And you can customize the application’s performance on the front end using server-based PHP. Because, yes, it’s done using blocks, the key part of the “new era” of WordPress. Blocks make sense for a lot of reasons, including that:
Wordcamp talks from 2023: