This plugin hasn’t been tested with the latest 3 major releases of WordPress. It may no longer be maintained or supported and may have compatibility issues when used with more recent versions of WordPress.

Hammy

Description

Introduction

Hammy takes your regular content images (only within posts and pages, not custom post types) and regenerates a number of smaller sized images. When a person visits your website, it then automatically provides them with the most appropriate image (or the smallest one possible). This makes for a better experience, especially on mobile. This uses the new WP 3.5 image code.

Will it work on my Theme?

Yes! (the only exception being themes with no standard posts or pages)

How does it work?

When activated, the <img> tag is replaced by the <figure> tag, and the alternate image sizes are provided in a way that only jQuery can access/load. If jQuery isn’t available, it falls back to the regular image you had there in the first place.

It also takes on any classes or alternate titles from the original image. It does not make any changes to your database (i.e. content or images that you already have remain untouched).

What else do I need to know?

  • Supports Retina
  • Uses WordPress 3.5 Image Code (no external dependency)
  • You need to be willing to spend a few minutes configuring and playing with the breakpoints and choosing the correct parent container to get it right.
  • Hammy filters the output every single time, but only needs to generate a resized image once.

Updates

Follow me for updates at @noeltock

GitHub

If you have technical issues or other enhancements that you’d like to contribute, please do so in the form of a pull request or issue here:

https://wordpress.org/plugins/hammy/

Feedback & Bugs

Kindly post any issues, questions or suggestions on the Hammy forums .

Screenshots

  • Options Screen

Installation

Video Walkthrough

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GpmAaGAW9-c

Hammy already starts working upon activation, so any configuration is optional:

  1. Upload the folder hammy to the /wp-content/plugins/ directory
  2. Activate the plugin through the ‘Plugins’ menu in WordPress
  3. (Optional) Go to Settings -> Hammy and review the options. Add the id/class of the container that holds your posts (i.e. #content). Then add breakpoints that are relevant to that container ( see the FAQ for an example ).
  4. (Optional) Edit your theme’s CSS to add figure.hammy-responsive, in a way that it is identical to any img styling used for your content area.

FAQ

How does the post/page container setting work?

The width of your browser is quite different than that of the post/page container (i.e. #content). By being able to measure the width of the content container instead of the browser window, you’ll ensure far better accuracy at all breakpoints.

Breakpoints example?

If your website is 960px wide, but the content (#content) is only 600px, then 600 is your largest breakpoint. If the next smaller size is iPhone landscape (where the sidebar is also positioned underneath the content) and you have a 10px margin on either side, that breakpoint is 460 (480 minus 20), and so forth.

At the end, your breakpoints may look like 300,460,600

It doesn’t work with this gallery plugin or something else, what to do?

You have the ability to ignore certain classes (i.e. «.gallery-thumb»), but please let me know of any edge-cases on the Hammy forums

How is Hammy constructed?

Hammy is possible through two awesome open source projects:

They’re both worth checking out and getting a better understanding of (or using in your mega-awesome WordPress client projects).

What’s with the squirrel?

Hammy, from the movie «Over the Hedge», he’s quite fast, like these images. Be sure to check out the movie for full appreciation.

Reviews

2 de septiembre, 2017
Incredible plugin, my page speed on Google was 74/100, after activate this plugin the score is 92/100. Like a rocket Thanks very much. A update it,s posible or mantain it. By now works fine
3 de septiembre, 2016
Looks like WordPress has overtaken this plugin and left it in the dust – doesn’t work on WP 4.5.1… No answers in the Support Forum, no update for over 2 years…
Read all 16 reviews

Contributors & Developers

“Hammy” is open source software. The following people have contributed to this plugin.

Contributors

Translate “Hammy” into your language.

Interested in development?

Browse the code, check out the SVN repository, or subscribe to the development log by RSS.

Changelog

1.5.1

  • Fix invalid markup

1.5.0

  • Moved back to using figure as opposed to picturefor larger compatibility (especially IE). Check your CSS to make sure figure acts like an image.
  • Updated Lazy Load to 1.9.3
  • Gave Lazy Load placeholders dimensions so that the browser doesn’t reflow for each load

1.4.1

  • Fixed Warnings
  • Typo
  • Tested PNG

1.4

  • Allow images smaller then the smallest breakpoint to function
  • WPThumb Update
  • 3.8.1 Compatibility Testing

1.3.2

  • WPThumb Update

1.3.1

  • Readme & Banner changes

1.3.0

  • Updated WPThumb
  • Added defaults that take into consideration $content_width if available.

1.2.3

  • Add Walkthrough Video (under Installation)

1.2.1

  • Fixed typo
  • Added walkthrough

1.2

  • Fixed readme.txt typo’s
  • Added title attribute to images
  • Updated WPThumb to latest

1.1

  • Add Lazy Loading with the help of @jacquesletesson
  • Clean up code to conform to WP standards more
  • Latest version of WPThumb

1.0

  • Uses WordPress 3.5 core for powering resizes.
  • Fixes

0.3.1

  • Slight logic change for the better

0.3

  • Changed tag figure to picture, closer to w3 discussions
  • Retina Support

0.1.1

  • Fix for if logic

0.1

  • Initial Release (Hammy Time)