Articles in this category
Sharing and Migrating Events Between Calendars
This article covers two related but distinct scenarios: permanently migrating events from one site to another, and setting up an ongoing live feed so…
Site Health and Uptime Monitoring for The Events Calendar
Keeping your events platform reliable means catching issues before they affect your users. This guide outlines how to set up monitoring and alerting for…
Subscribing to and Exporting Events
Having a calendar of events on your WordPress site is great. Wouldn’t it be super awesome if you could get those events into a personal…
Testing Conflicts With Themes and Other Plugins
We work hard to make our plugins broadly compatible. However, like all WordPress developers we cannot test with every plugin, theme, and server environment…
Testing Tickets Commerce Purchases
Before going live with ticket sales, it’s a good idea to run a test purchase to make sure your payment gateway is connected correctly,…
Translating The Events Calendar
💡 This article is about how to help translate The Events Calendar. If you just want to change the calendar language, go here. Core…
Triggers, Actions & Data Fields for Power Automate with The Events Calendar
Prerequisite read: creating a cloud automation flow with Power Automate Note: A premium Power Automate account is required. There are two Power Automate connectors…
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…
Understanding How Event Tickets Calculates Availability
Ticket availability shows how many units are left for a ticket that’s been created for an event. Event Tickets calculates availability from three different data points:…
Understanding Link Tracking in Promoter Emails
Once you connect your website to Promoter and set up your Mail Deliverability, you’ll be ready to send messages to your attendees using Promoter.…
Using Attendee Registration Forms with Event Tickets
Collecting information about your attendees — such as their names and email addresses — can give you insights about who is coming to your…
Using Default Content on Events
Say you have a calendar where 90% of the events happen in the same city, or even at the same venue. We’ve got you…