Gutenberg

Description

“Gutenberg” is a codename for a whole new paradigm in WordPress site building and publishing, that aims to revolutionise the entire publishing experience as much as Gutenberg did the printed word. Right now, the project is in the first phase of a four-phase process that will touch every piece of WordPress — Editing, Customisation, Collaboration and Multilingual — and is focused on a new editing experience, the block editor.

The block editor introduces a modular approach to pages and posts: each piece of content in the editor, from a paragraph to an image gallery to a headline, is its own block. And just like physical blocks, WordPress blocks can be added, arranged and rearranged, allowing WordPress users to create media-rich pages in a visually intuitive way — and without work-arounds like shortcodes or custom HTML.

The block editor first became available in December 2018, and we’re still hard at work refining the experience, creating more and better blocks and laying the groundwork for the next three phases of work. The Gutenberg plugin gives you the latest version of the block editor so you can join us in testing bleeding-edge features, start playing with blocks and maybe get inspired to build your own.

Discover More

  • User Documentation: see the WordPress Editor documentation for detailed docs on using the editor as an author creating posts and pages.

  • Developer Documentation: extending and customising is at the heart of the WordPress platform, see the Developer Documentation for extensive tutorials, documentation and API reference on how to extend the editor.

  • Contributors: Gutenberg is an open-source project and welcomes all contributors from code to design, from documentation to triage. See the Contributor’s Handbook for all the details on how you can help.

The development hub for the Gutenberg project is on Github at: https://github.com/wordpress/gutenberg

Discussion for the project is on Make Blog and the #core-editor channel in Slack, signup information.

FAQ

How can I send feedback or get help with a bug?

We’d love to hear your bug reports, feature suggestions and any other feedback! Please head over to the GitHub issues page to search for existing issues or open a new one. While we’ll try to triage issues reported here on the plugin forum, you’ll get a faster response (and reduce duplication of effort) by keeping everything centralised in the GitHub repository.

What’s Next for the Project?

The four phases of the project are Editing, Customisation, Collaboration and Multilingual. You can hear more about the project and phases from Matt in his State of the Word talks for 2019 and 2018. Additionally you can follow updates in the Make WordPress Core blog.

Where Can I Read More About Gutenberg?

Where can I see which Gutenberg plugin versions are included in each WordPress release?

View the Versions in WordPress document to get a table showing which Gutenberg plugin version is included in each WordPress release.

Reviews

30 October 2020
This is not working properly. Also, not able to manage meta properly as well. Didn't go for it.
29 October 2020
I was very resistent in the beginning but now I can't imagine going back to crappy bloated pagebuilders. My gutenberg pages are blazing fast and all customers are able to use them with ease. Haven't built my own blocks yet but will definitely give it a try.
30 October 2020
I think I get it now. But I'll state what seems to me to be the case: The folks behind this project actually want Gutenberg to fail. That's the only way I can explain the inconsistency I'm witnessing. I mean seriously, what they're doing looks and behaves like sabotage. Unfortunately I had to delete my previous review and change this to a 1 star. I don't understand some of the minds behind this project and the apparent issue some of those minds have with CONSISTENCY. The problem here clearly isn't Gutenberg, it's the developers playing around with it and ruining it. I decided to give Gutenberg a second chance and I reinstalled WordPress (5.5.1) and removed the fork of classic WordPress that I had been using. I have been EXTREMELY resistant to Gutenberg Blocks because of the HORRIBLE experience I had with it before. Well I received an email today that my site had updated to WordPress 5.5.2 and when I signed on to work on my sites, I noticed that the Rows feature that was there in Gutenberg is GONE, does NOT work, and is REPLACED with Groups. So, WHAT exactly, was wrong with the WORKING "Rows" option that you HAD at first??? And, here again, whatever you did, it no longer functions properly! What ELSE will you go and change for no sound reason whatsoever??? I'm going to be installing the Classic Editor plugin because I literally DON'T have time for this... whatever this little toy project is you have going on that you're playing around with, irregardless of the fact that people's WEBSITES are depending on the software! I'm so over this. Just.. freakin UNbelievable!
24 October 2020
Like any aother sane WordPress user I try to keep the number of installed plugins to a minimum and to be forced to install one just to be able to continue using the product really sucks. I'm a senior developer myself and I fully understand the ambition and reasoning behind this change but from a user perspective it's really bad. The name itself is also quite disrespectful to Gutenberg and his family imo. This is unfortunately the worst thing to happen to WordPress to this day and I hope Gutenberg will be put back in the grave where it belongs.
24 October 2020
The experience with the editor has been good so far. Lite and fast. I'd like to see more basic features added like padding and margin for each block instead of manually adding it with css. A better UI is needed badly, blocks are not very well distinguished when there is no content in it. Overall we need a good set of blocks to build more complex layouts. A contact form would be very welcomed instead of needing an extra plugin for that.
24 October 2020
I despise using wordpress now. It has not only ruined a whole lot of posts that I now have to go back and "fix" with this utterly useless editor, it has broken all sorts of features on my site. I just can't believe this shitty software was forced onto everyone as an improvement. Devs should be ashamed for ruining the wordpress experience, now I have to spend 10 times as long just trying to do simple things that were so easy to do before. You idiots are lucky that wordpress is one of the best free solutions, but I will be looking for alternatives to this trash as soon as I can move my site. Unbelievable.
Read all 3,223 reviews

Contributors & Developers

“Gutenberg” is open source software. The following people have contributed to this plugin.

Contributors

“Gutenberg” has been translated into 48 locales. Thank you to the translators for their contributions.

Translate “Gutenberg” into your language.

Interested in development?

Browse the code, check out the SVN repository, or subscribe to the development log by RSS.

Change log

To read the change log for Gutenberg 9.2.2, please navigate to the release page.