For example, let's say I am developing a template that will be used by 10 different pages on my site. For the area that will contain the primary body of text, I could enter an include statement.
In the include file, I can have it detect the filename of the page and select the correct body copy based on the filename and automatically insert it on the page. Now picture this on a larger scale with each column of the page being able to hold a simple include statement. Previously, if I made a significant columns adjustment, once RLMP was exported I had to manually put everything back on the page. With my suggestion here, if I had to make a change to the RLMP file and re-export, it reduces my work because I don't have to put any copy back into the newly exported template. I can almost use the export file itself with perhaps just a few minor changes.
The new release of RLMP and its copy-editing abilities are awesome, and I'm already using them. My suggestion here goes beyond body copy. By having elements which will hold code snippets, I can call functions, data from a database, display iframes such as Amazon associate links and youtube videos, and more -- and I don't have to put those functions back into the exported file if I have to edit the template and re-export.
I wouldn't make the element have to contain long sets of coding. It could be limited to 255-500 characters. The idea isn't to be able to do all the coding in RLMP; rather, it is to be able to input includes or small code snippets.
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https://forms.windowtinting.com/forms/w … ppingcart/