I recently started the FedDibblety house blog, documenting our home improvements to our new home in Indiana (which Clare’s parents built). I set up accounts for my wife Clare, her parents, Dave and Ellen, and my parents, Harold and Fran. Ellen, being a technology nut like myself, immediately jumped in writing posts about the house, and also had some feature requests. One of those features was to have the blog read in chronological order. Most blogs read in reverse chronological order, but since this one was kind of diary-esque, it seemed more appropriate to have it in normal order. I am also dating posts corresponding to the improvements made, not the actual post date. I started searching around for forum posts and such about how to do this, and I came across two relevant ones. I came across one post on wordpress.org which had a very simple solution, of simply adding one line to the index.php file in the root directory, like so:
This did exactly as one would expect. However, this also caused some problems. For those avid blog readers, now they would have to scroll way down (or go the archives) to see new posts, which doesn’t really make sense. In addition, the RSS feed was also chronologically ordered, so that RSS users would find it very difficult to see if the blog had been updated recently. While searching I also found another post on janegalt.net, in which the blogger asked the same question, and a reply by Jeff Licquia suggested a very simple solution:
To set up archives to use a different template, go into the management page, then go to Options, then Permalinks.
If you can’t, or don’t understand, the RewriteRules stuff, look at the note about not being able to use mod_rewrite. Where it says:
/index.php/archives/%year%/%monthnum%/%day%/%postname%/
Change “index.php” to something else, like “archives.php”, and put that in for the virtual site structure. Copy index.php to archives.php in your document root, then add the special flag to archives.php. You should be all set at that point.
(I’m a newbie to WordPress, but not to Web servers or Web stuff in general, so the above makes sense to me but isn’t tested. I’ll try to help if you have problems.)
This idea worked very well. I made the change in the WordPress options page, then copied index.php to archives.php, using the $order=ASC flag, and removed that from index.php. Then I had to change the .htaccess file to direct queries to archives.php. I did not want to do this for feeds though, so I had to put in two rules, like so:
#.htaccess file for fedibblety/house blog
RewriteEngine On
RewriteBase /house/
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-d
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !.*feed\/?$ [NC]
RewriteRule . /house/archives.php
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} .*feed\/?$ [NC]
RewriteRule . /house/index.php
Then there was one last thing. In that blog (and in this one), I am using the fancy-archives plugin (as I write this post that site seems to be down, so I am not providing a link), which I have tweaked a bit. To get the archives in the sidebar listed in chronological order, I just had to change the SQL queries in the fancy-archives-list.php file to ORDER BY post_date ASC.
That was it!