Labsco
wordpress logo

wp-block-themes

1,800

by wordpress · part of wordpress/agent-skills

WordPress block theme development: theme.json, templates, patterns, and Site Editor troubleshooting. Covers theme.json editing (presets, settings, per-block styles), templates and template parts, patterns, and style variations across WordPress 6.9+ Includes triage scripts to detect theme roots and block theme structure, plus guided procedures for creating new themes or converting classic themes Provides debugging workflows for style hierarchy issues, user customization overrides, and Site...

🔥🔥🔥🔥✓ VerifiedFreeQuick setup
🧩 One of 7 skills in the wordpress/agent-skills package — works on its own, and pairs well with its siblings.

WordPress block theme development: theme.json, templates, patterns, and Site Editor troubleshooting. Covers theme.json editing (presets, settings, per-block styles), templates and template parts, patterns, and style variations across WordPress 6.9+ Includes triage scripts to detect theme roots and block theme structure, plus guided procedures for creating new themes or converting classic themes Provides debugging workflows for style hierarchy issues, user customization overrides, and Site...

Inspect the full instructions your agent will receiveExpand

This is the exact playbook injected into your agent when the skill activates — shown here so you can audit it before installing. You don't need to read it to use the skill.


name: wp-block-themes description: "Use when developing WordPress block themes: theme.json (global settings/styles), templates and template parts, patterns, style variations, and Site Editor troubleshooting (style hierarchy, overrides, caching)." compatibility: "Targets WordPress 6.9+ (PHP 7.2.24+). Filesystem-based agent with bash + node. Some workflows require WP-CLI."

WP Block Themes

When to use

Use this skill for block theme work such as:

  • editing theme.json (presets, settings, styles, per-block styles)
  • adding or changing templates (templates/*.html) and template parts (parts/*.html)
  • adding patterns (patterns/*.php) and controlling what appears in the inserter
  • adding style variations (styles/*.json)
  • debugging “styles not applying” / “editor doesn’t reflect theme.json”

Inputs required

  • Repo root and which theme is targeted (theme directory if multiple exist).
  • Target WordPress version range (theme.json version and features vary by core version).
  • Where the issue manifests: Site Editor, post editor, frontend, or all.

Procedure

0) Triage and locate block theme roots

  1. Run triage:
    • node skills/wp-project-triage/scripts/detect_wp_project.mjs
  2. Detect theme roots + key folders:
    • node skills/wp-block-themes/scripts/detect_block_themes.mjs

If multiple themes exist, pick one and scope all changes to that theme root.

1) Create a new block theme (if needed)

If you are creating a new block theme from scratch (or converting a classic theme):

  • Prefer starting from a known-good scaffold (or exporting from a WP environment) rather than guessing file layout.
  • Be explicit about the minimum supported WordPress version because theme.json schema versions differ.

Read:

  • references/creating-new-block-theme.md

After creating the theme root, re-run detect_block_themes and continue below.

2) Confirm theme type and override expectations

  • Block theme indicators:
    • theme.json present
    • templates/ and/or parts/ present
  • Remember the style hierarchy:
    • core defaults → theme.json → child theme → user customizations
    • user customizations can make theme.json edits appear “ignored”

Read:

  • references/debugging.md (style hierarchy + fastest checks)

3) Make theme.json changes safely

Decide whether you are changing:

  • settings (what the UI allows): presets, typography scale, colors, layout, spacing
  • styles (how it looks by default): CSS-like rules for elements/blocks

Read:

  • references/theme-json.md

4) Templates and template parts

  • Templates live under templates/ and are HTML.
  • Template parts live under parts/ and must not be nested in subdirectories.

Read:

  • references/templates-and-parts.md

5) Patterns

Prefer filesystem patterns under patterns/ when you want theme-owned patterns.

Read:

  • references/patterns.md

6) Style variations

Style variations are JSON files under styles/. Note: once a user picks a style variation, that selection is stored in the DB, so changing the file may not “update what the user sees” automatically.

Read:

  • references/style-variations.md

Verification

  • Site Editor reflects changes where expected (Styles UI, templates, patterns).
  • Frontend renders with expected styles.
  • If styles aren’t changing, confirm whether user customizations override theme defaults.
  • Run the repo’s build/lint scripts if assets are involved (fonts, custom JS/CSS build).

Failure modes / debugging

Start with:

  • references/debugging.md

Common issues:

  • wrong theme root (editing an inactive theme)
  • user customizations override your defaults
  • invalid theme.json shape/typos prevent application
  • templates/parts in wrong folders (or nested parts)

Escalation

If upstream behavior is unclear, consult canonical docs:

  • Theme Handbook and Block Editor Handbook for theme.json, templates, patterns, and style variations.