Everything you need to know about WordPress 5.8.2

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Everything you need to know about WordPress 5.8.2

WordPress 5.8 "Tatum" is now available, and it is a watershed moment. Aside from a plethora of new features, enhancements, and bug fixes, the WordPress new version brings a new approach to constructing websites by providing the initial features within the bigger project known as Full Site Editing.

Aside from Full Site Editing, WordPress 5.8 introduces numerous upgrades and additions to various sections of the CMS.

WordPress users who do not utilize the Gutenberg plugin will see additions and enhancements from nine Gutenberg releases in total.

WebP format support is an important new feature for consumers who are concerned about the performance of their websites.


Developers will undoubtedly appreciate the removal of Internet Explorer 11 from the list of supported browsers, the new block configuration and styling mechanism based on theme.json, the improved block registration system based on block.json, and the numerous APIs improvements coming with the second WordPress release of 2021.

As a result, WordPress new version does not yet provide a perfect and complete FSE experience. Instead, new features will be added and developed over time, beginning with version 5.8. For the same reason, we can anticipate that WordPress 5.8 will have little impact on how we build websites.

Full Site Editing includes the Site Editor, Global Styles, Query block, Navigation block, Templates, block themes, and numerous additional sub-projects. However, as we'll see later in this post, the closest thing to Site Editing in WordPress 5.8 is the Template Editing Mode and the associated Theme Blocks.

WordPress 5.8.2 features

The Gutenberg changes are at the top of the list. You can now alter Widgets to include Gutenberg blocks, and the Theme Customizer (found under Appearance – Customize) also supports block inclusion. This is a big deal because widgets and the theme customizer were formerly the sole realms of plugin/theme creators.

Alternatively, specialized themes such as Divi include theme builders that allow for non-content-area customization (which are nonetheless more powerful than Gutenberg's newest choices).

Block Widgets


The interface is the same as in the Post or Page editor. Enter the customizer's Widgets area and press the + button. You will select a block or blocks from the menu and interact with them in the same way that you would with any other piece of material.

You can continue to use your current widgets. They are currently referred to as Legacy Widgets by WordPress. Simply go to Appearance – Widgets, and the new Legacy Widgets block will show a dropdown list of everything you've installed. When you install the Classic Widgets plugin, you will also be able to disable the new block widgets. That keeps things as they have always been.

Site Editing

WordPress 5.8 introduces a slew of new blocks that enable full-site editing. When you add a new element, look for them under the Theme header in the block editor. In addition, the Design header features a number of new components that complement those already there.

Colors, patterns, and filters

In the block editor, you also have access to a few extra design options for your content. You now have a centralized edit area for pictures that contains familiar tools like Crop and Add Text Over Image, but you can also utilize Apply Duotone Filter to easily add color and vitality to your posts and pages. There is no requirement for an outside editor.

Changes to the Media Library

In addition to WebP distribution, the WordPress media library receives a few tweaks in 5.8. The main news is that users are no longer subjected to extended load times as a result of the default infinite scroll.


To begin an AJAX call for more photos, you must now press a Load More button. This new way may take some time to get used to for certain users, but it significantly improves load times on the admin dashboard.

Also Read: [Bytes Technolab Inc Features In The Top 30 Best WordPress Developers On DesignRush]

Template Editing Mode

The Template Editing Mode allows you to use blocks to construct post/page templates. It's a terrific technique to simplify site creation by allowing users to use various site editing tools from outside of the site editor interface while getting used to working with blocks.

This is also useful for users who do not use block-based themes but want to build and edit templates from the block editor's UI.

Customizing themes in WordPress has never been easier. You no longer need to create a child theme to generate custom templates. With WordPress 5.8, Template Editing is no longer limited to block themes; you may also use it with traditional themes, albeit you must opt-in to use it with classic themes.

Wrapping up

WordPress 5.8 includes over 170 bug fixes, 96 enhancements and feature requests, and 24 other tasks from the Core repository. With new block widgets, WebP, editor modifications, hundreds of new blocks, and developer options like theme.json, this release significantly improves WordPress.


Not only will we be delving deeper into some of the 5.8 changes in future posts, but the kind guys at Make. WordPress.org has compiled an exhaustive field guide to help you manage the myriad changes that arrived with WordPress 5.8.

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