ThemeForest

WordPress child themes

1743 posts
  • Has been a member for 3-4 years
  • Repeatedly Helped protect Envato Marketplaces against copyright violations
  • Exclusive Author
  • Sold between 5 000 and 10 000 dollars
  • Bought between 10 and 49 items
  • Germany
  • Referred between 1 and 9 users
BroOf says

Would you guys recommend to use WordPress child themes?

1 year ago
653 posts
  • Has been a member for 3-4 years
  • Bought between 1000 and 4999 items
  • Canada
  • Referred between 1 and 9 users
chrismccoy says

Would you guys recommend to use WordPress child themes?

child themes are great for using the main theme as a base.

1 year ago
1743 posts
  • Has been a member for 3-4 years
  • Repeatedly Helped protect Envato Marketplaces against copyright violations
  • Exclusive Author
  • Sold between 5 000 and 10 000 dollars
  • Bought between 10 and 49 items
  • Germany
  • Referred between 1 and 9 users
BroOf says


Would you guys recommend to use WordPress child themes?
child themes are great for using the main theme as a base.

Yes I thought about it. Will buyer appreciate this or do they think it is more work for them to set up the WordPress theme?

1 year ago
246 posts
  • Has been a member for 2-3 years
  • Beta Tester
  • Exclusive Author
  • Sold between 5 000 and 10 000 dollars
  • Bought between 10 and 49 items
  • Romania
  • Referred between 1 and 9 users
web_gab says

there is a child theme already on the TF market (Improvement – Genesis Child Theme), or perhaps there are more but I didn’t notice them. take a look at the sales, comments, speak with the author…

1 year ago
1743 posts
  • Has been a member for 3-4 years
  • Repeatedly Helped protect Envato Marketplaces against copyright violations
  • Exclusive Author
  • Sold between 5 000 and 10 000 dollars
  • Bought between 10 and 49 items
  • Germany
  • Referred between 1 and 9 users
BroOf says

I don’t want to sell child themes. I will include always one child theme in my main theme so the user can customize it to his/her needs and when I publish an update he/she doesn’t need to change 100 files.

1 year ago
1743 posts
  • Has been a member for 3-4 years
  • Repeatedly Helped protect Envato Marketplaces against copyright violations
  • Exclusive Author
  • Sold between 5 000 and 10 000 dollars
  • Bought between 10 and 49 items
  • Germany
  • Referred between 1 and 9 users
BroOf says

Thank you for the reply!

1 year ago
2095 posts
  • Has been a member for 2-3 years
  • Repeatedly Helped protect Envato Marketplaces against copyright violations
  • Grew a moustache for the Envato Movember competition
  • Most Wanted Bounty Winner
  • Community Moderator
  • Exclusive Author
  • Sold between 100 000 and 250 000 dollars
  • Elite Author
  • Bought between 10 and 49 items
  • United States
  • Referred between 500 and 999 users
sevenspark says

I think it’s a good idea in general, but it still poses problems with template overrides. For example, if they override your header.php file in the child theme, and you make an update to the header file in your new release, those changes won’t exist in their child theme, so you’re back to the same problem (or worse, the differences cause the theme to break with the updated files).

I think to mitigate this type of effect, you can put as much functionality as possible into non-template files like functions.php, and utilize them via action hooks. Better yet, if you provide appropriate filters and hooks in your theme, users can update the functionality they need at a more granular level without overriding entire templates. Of course, that assumes a certain amount of expertise on the users’ part.

In the end, I think having child themes as the preferred customization technique is a good idea (much better than direct theme edits), but it won’t alleviate all headaches unfortunately.

1 year ago
sevenspark is a moderator
by
by
by
by
by