Contact Support
Your Account
Search and Discovery
Post+
Customizing Your Tumblr
Posting
Mobile
Community
Policy
Help Center
Help Center Customizing Your Tumblr Themes
Custom HTML
Editing your custom HTML
To edit your blog theme's HTML:
Click "Settings" under the account menu at the top of the dashboard.
Choose the blog you’d like to update on the right side of the page, then click “Edit theme” in the Website Theme section.
Click the Edit HTML button and edit the custom HTML as desired in the source code editor. To see the changes reflected on the page, click “Update Preview.”
When you're finished, click the back arrow and then click "Save."
We’ve also got a brilliant guide to making custom Tumblr themes right here.
Pro tip: You can revert to an earlier version of your theme's custom HTML (you know, if you’re feeling nostalgic about an old version). We store recent versions of your Custom HTML on our Theme Recovery page. If you don’t see the version you want, it might be too many revisions back. This means it’s gone forever.
Troubleshooting
If your blog looks a little wrecked or is totally blank, it’s possible that you’ve inserted incorrect code into your theme or blog description. Try the following:
Remove all code from the description box at the top of your Customize menu. Click "Save," then view your blog to see if the problem is resolved.
Save a copy of your custom HTML, then re-install the theme from www.tumblr.com/themes.
Tips:
Clear your browser cache between changes to make sure you're seeing a current version of your blog. The easiest way is to hit Cmd+Shift+R on a Mac or Ctrl+Shift+R on Windows, which will completely refresh the page.
If you can't view the Customize button on your blog, you can still access the Customize menu in several other ways.
We won’t be able to help you figure out broken code in any real detail, but whatever your problem is, someone else has probably had it before. Don’t hesitate to search the internet or consult a savvy friend.
Never use any code from a source you don’t know and trust. Better yet, never use any code that you don't fully understand. Bad code can break your whole blog or force you to reset your password if our system detects something really insecure.
Our staff can’t help with HTML/CSS customizations, but if you need help you can ask a friend or brush up your skills. And if that fails, you can always use one of the other zillions of themes at www.tumblr.com/themes.
Learn more
To learn more about HTML, CSS, and Tumblr themes, check out the resources at www.codecademy.com and www.developer.mozilla.org/en-US/learn.
Return to top
Contact Support
Recently viewed articles
Queued posts
Related articles
Theme basics
Customize menu
Using the Neue Post Format
Custom Domains
Google Analytics
STAFF TUMBLRS
Tumblr Staff
Support
Creative
Engineering
Changes
WIP
OFFICIAL TUMBLRS
Action on Tumblr
Art on Tumblr
Gaming on Tumblr
Fandom on Tumblr
Music on Tumblr
GET THE APP
iOS
Android
Sign in
Create an Account
© TUMBLR INC.
Terms of Service
Copyright
Support
Jobs
Community Guidelines
Privacy Policy
Bug Bounty Program
Global Advertising Policy
Tumblr logo
Search
Your Account
Search and Discovery
Post+
Customizing Your Tumblr
Posting
Mobile
Community
Policy
Help Center
Help Center Posting Post options
Queued posts
Queued posts help keep your blog active by staggering posts over a period of hours or days. To add posts to your queue:
On the web, while creating a new post, click the arrow next to "Post" and choose "Add to queue" from the menu. Then click "Queue."
On mobile, while creating a new post, tap the meatballs menu (●●●) and choose "Add to queue" from the menu. Then tap "Queue."
To access your queued posts:
On the web, click the account menu (the human icon at the top of the screen), hover over the blog whose queue you want to see, click the little dude with three lines that appears, and click "Queue."
In the apps, tap the account menu (the human icon), and select the desired blog from the menu at the top of the screen. Tap the gear icon, and choose "Queue." Note that in the apps, the "Queue" option won't appear in the menu unless you've queued or scheduled posts already.
To edit your queue settings:
On the web, click the account menu (the human icon at the top of the screen), hover over the blog whose queue you want to see, click the little dude with three lines that appears, and click "Queue." Edit the settings you see there to specify how many posts will be published from your queue, and the time frame they'll be published in.
In the apps, tap the account menu (the human icon), and select the desired blog from the menu at the top of the screen. Tap the gear icon, and choose "Queue." Then tap the gear icon to adjust the frequency and timing of your queued posts.
Other stuff to note about the queue:
You can use the queue to publish up to 50 posts per day.
You can't pause the queue, so make sure the posts are ready to be published before adding them to the queue.
You can store 300 posts in the queue at a time. If you want to add more than that, we recommend saving posts as drafts and moving them into your queue as needed.
If your queued post fails to post for any reason, you can find it in your draft posts.
Related articles
Scheduled posts
Drafts
Adult Content
Tumblr Ads & You
On-Blog Advertising
STAFF TUMBLRS
Tumblr Staff
Support
Creative
Engineering
Changes
WIP
OFFICIAL TUMBLRS
Action on Tumblr
Art on Tumblr
Gaming on Tumblr
Fandom on Tumblr
Music on Tumblr
GET THE APP
Sign in
Create an Account
© TUMBLR INC.
Terms of Service
Copyright
Support
Jobs
Community Guidelines
Privacy Policy
Bug Bounty Program
Global Advertising Policy
¥|<<yr2022revistedfrom#1637-@#unit116>>
<div class="tumblr-post" data-href="https://embed.tumblr.com/embed/post/udYc5Z4V-VtJqf1L4Y7wQA/675527687531642880" data-did="5ccd5ba963e06d875d785c629221d80f0969e306"><a href="https://hello-dice-me.tumblr.com/post/675527687531642880">https://hello-dice-me.tumblr.com/post/675527687531642880</a></div> <script async src="https://assets.tumblr.com/post.js"></script>
No comments:
Post a Comment