All you need to do is designate where you’d like the post content to be displayed in your custom template. Yes, it’s true! With Elementor Pro’s Theme Builder features, you can design the page’s look and feel around the post’s Gutenberg content. However, contrary to what you might be thinking, you can indeed compose posts with Gutenberg while using Elementor Pro. Gutenberg just clearly offers a more efficient, enjoyable, and complete content editing experience. Classic Editor, on the other hand, lacks in comparison and feels like writing a forum post in the early 2000s.
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It is full of useful keyboard shortcuts, smooth animations, rich content elements, layout components, and offers a seamless full-screen text editor. Gutenberg feels like an entire desktop application for composing rich content posts. The Classic Editor is basically just a rich content text area while Gutenberg, on the other hand, is a full-screen WYSIWYG editor. When finally trying the Gutenberg editor, I quickly felt like it was exactly what I was wanting. The content was ugly and the process was inefficient. After writing a few blog posts in the Classic Editor, I was eager to find another way. This project actually came about because I started considering using Gutenberg instead of the Classic Editor for WordPress. For this reason, this project makes for the perfect comparison between Elementor Pro and a custom Gutenberg-based theme. The look of my new theme greatly resembles the original theme I had implemented using Elementor Pro. Did you notice? This past week, I deployed my custom WordPress theme for Purple Turtle Creative! If you couldn’t tell the difference, then you’re likely not alone.