Plugin info

Total downloads: 21,468
Active installs: 100
Total reviews: 8
Average rating: 5
Support threads opened: 0
Support threads resolved: 0 (0%)
Available in: 2 language(s)
Contributors: 1
Last updated: 7/10/2018 (2731 days ago)
Added to WordPress: 3/31/2015 (10 years old)
Minimum WordPress version: 4.7
Tested up to WordPress version: 4.9.26
Minimum PHP version: 5.6

Maintenance & Compatibility

Maintenance score

Possibly abandoned • Last updated 2731 days ago • 8 reviews

22/100

Is Tabulate abandoned?

Possibly abandoned (last update 2731 days ago).

Compatibility

Requires WordPress: 4.7
Tested up to: 4.9.26
Requires PHP: 5.6

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Description








This plugin provides a simple user-friendly interface to tables in your database.
Somewhat akin to phpMyAdmin, but easier to use and more focused on end users.

The documentation can be found at tabulate.readthedocs.org.

Features (in no particular order):

  1. Tables can be filtered by any column or columns, and with a range of
    operators (‘contains’, ‘is’, ’empty’, ‘one of’, ‘greater than’, ‘less than’,
    and the negations of all of these). Multiple filters are conjunctive
    (i.e. with a logical and).
  2. Access can be granted to read, create, update, delete, and import
    records in any or all tables. (This can be done by anyone with the
    promote_users capability.) Access can also be granted to anonymous users.
  3. CSV data can be imported, with the UI supporting column mapping, data
    validation, and previewing prior to final import. If an imported row has a
    value for the Primary Key, the existing row will be overwritten.
  4. Data can be exported to CSV, including after filters have been applied.
  5. A quick-jump navigation box is located top right of every page,
    and can also be added as a Dashboard widget.
  6. Records in tables with date columns can be viewed in a calendar.
  7. Entity Relationship Diagrams (drawn with GraphViz)
    can be automatically generated, with any specified subset of tables. Foreign
    keys are displayed as directed edges. This feature is only available if the
    TFO Graphviz plugin is installed.
  8. All data modifications are recorded, along with optional comments that users
    can provide when updating data.
  9. The [tabulate] shortcode can be used to embed tables, lists, row-counts,
    and data-entry forms into WordPress content. For more details,
    read the documentation.
  10. Tables with point columns can be exported to KML and OpenStreetMap XML.
    Also, data entry for these columns is done with a small slippy map, on which
    a marker can be placed.

Development is managed on GitHub
at github.com/tabulate/tabulate

Frequently Asked Questions

Review feed

No reviews available

Screenshots

  1. The main screen of a single table, with provision for searching and navigating.

    The main screen of a single table, with provision for searching and navigating.

  2. The permission-granting interface. All roles are shown across the top, and
all tables down the left side.

    The permission-granting interface. All roles are shown across the top, and all tables down the left side.

Changelog

This is a reverse-chronologically ordered list of breaking or major changes to Tabulate.
A full list of all changes can be found at (https://github.com/tabulate/tabulate/commits/master)

  • November 2017: Version 2.10, removed dependency on the REST API plugin (which is not in core).
  • January 2016: Version 2.5, introduced schema editing.
  • October 2015: Version 2, switching to version 2 of the WP-API plugin.
  • July 2015: Version 1, with basic functionality and after having
    been run for some months in a production environment by the plugin author.
  • March to July 2015: Pre-release development.

Prior to version 1, no changes were listed here (there were too many of them, and
nothing was stable yet).