Author: The Events Calendar Team
Moving Event Tickets and Attendees
With Event Tickets and Event Tickets Plus, you have the ability to move tickets (RSVPs and e-commerce tickets) to other events and to move…
Displaying Multiple Calendars by Category
We’re often asked if you can have multiple event calendars on your site. While there isn’t a way to make fully separate calendars on…
Creating a Google Maps API Key for The Events Calendar
Google requires the use of an API key to use Google Maps features. The Events Calendar comes with a Google Maps API key built…
Using WooCommerce Extensions with Event Tickets
Event Tickets Plus integrates tightly with WooCommerce, which means you can take advantage of the broader WooCommerce extension ecosystem to add capabilities that aren’t…
Using WPML with The Events Calendar
WPML is the most popular multilingual plugin for WordPress, with over 1 million installations. Using WPML and The Events Calendar, you can translate your…
Customizing Community Events Submissions
The Community Events submission form gives your users a way to add events to your calendar, but its default setup won’t suit every site.…
Using the Events Countdown Widget
The Events Countdown widget is a handy little widget that allows you to select a published event from your calendar and display a clock that–you…
Customizing the Single Event Page
The single event page is where visitors land when they click into an event from your calendar — it shows the full details, dates,…
Integrating SEO, Caching, and Performance Plugins with The Events Calendar
The Events Calendar works well alongside most performance, caching, and SEO plugins — but each one requires a few specific settings to avoid conflicts…
Understanding Caching with The Events Calendar
When a visitor comes to your site they are generally seeking one thing: information! One of the goals of web applications like WordPress (and…