=== Classic Editor === Contributors: wordpressdotorg, azaozz, melchoyce, chanthaboune, alexislloyd, pento, youknowriad, desrosj, luciano-croce Tags: gutenberg, disable, disable gutenberg, editor, classic editor, block editor Requires at least: 4.9 Tested up to: 6.2 Stable tag: 1.6.3 Requires PHP: 5.2.4 License: GPLv2 or later License URI: http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-2.0.html Enables the previous "classic" editor and the old-style Edit Post screen with TinyMCE, Meta Boxes, etc. Supports all plugins that extend this screen. == Description == Classic Editor is an official plugin maintained by the WordPress team that restores the previous ("classic") WordPress editor and the "Edit Post" screen. It makes it possible to use plugins that extend that screen, add old-style meta boxes, or otherwise depend on the previous editor. Classic Editor is an official WordPress plugin, and will be fully supported and maintained until 2024, or as long as is necessary. At a glance, this plugin adds the following: * Administrators can select the default editor for all users. * Administrators can allow users to change their default editor. * When allowed, the users can choose which editor to use for each post. * Each post opens in the last editor used regardless of who edited it last. This is important for maintaining a consistent experience when editing content. In addition, the Classic Editor plugin includes several filters that let other plugins control the settings, and the editor choice per post and per post type. By default, this plugin hides all functionality available in the new block editor ("Gutenberg"). == Changelog == = 1.6.3 = * Added some WPCS fixes, props NicktheGeek on GitHub. * Updated "Tested up to" in the readme and removed it from classic-editor.php. This should fix false positive errors in security plugins in the future. = 1.6.2 = * Fixed bug that was preventing saving of the last used editor. = 1.6.1 = * Fixed a warning on the block editor based widgets screen. * Fixed use of a deprecated filter. = 1.6 = * Updated for WordPress 5.5. * Fixed minor issues with calling deprecated functions, needlessly registering uninstall hook, and capitalization of some strings. = 1.5 = * Updated for WordPress 5.2 and Gutenberg 5.3. * Enhanced and fixed the "open posts in the last editor used to edit them" logic. * Fixed adding post state so it can easily be accessed from other plugins. = 1.4 = * On network installations removed the restriction for only network activation. * Added support for network administrators to choose the default network-wide editor. * Fixed the settings link in the warning on network About screen. * Properly added the "Switch to classic editor" menu item to the block editor menu. = 1.3 = * Fixed removal of the "Try Gutenberg" dashboard widget. * Fixed condition for displaying of the after upgrade notice on the "What's New" screen. Shown when the classic editor is selected and users cannot switch editors. = 1.2 = * Fixed switching editors from the Add New (post) screen before a draft post is saved. * Fixed typo that was appending the edit URL to the `classic-editor` query var. * Changed detecting of WordPress 5.0 to not use version check. Fixes a bug when testing 5.1-alpha. * Changed the default value of the option to allow users to switch editors to false. * Added disabling of the Gutenberg plugin and lowered the required WordPress version to 4.9. * Added `classic_editor_network_default_settings` filter. = 1.1 = Fixed a bug where it may attempt to load the block editor for post types that do not support editor when users are allowed to switch editors. = 1.0 = * Updated for WordPress 5.0. * Changed all "Gutenberg" names/references to "block editor". * Refreshed the settings UI. * Removed disabling of the Gutenberg plugin. This was added for testing in WordPress 4.9. Users who want to continue following the development of Gutenberg in WordPress 5.0 and beyond will not need another plugin to disable it. * Added support for per-user settings of default editor. * Added support for admins to set the default editor for the site. * Added support for admins to allow users to change their default editor. * Added support for network admins to prevent site admins from changing the default settings. * Added support to store the last editor used for each post and open it next time. Enabled when users can choose default editor. * Added "post editor state" in the listing of posts on the Posts screen. Shows the editor that will be opened for the post. Enabled when users can choose default editor. * Added `classic_editor_enabled_editors_for_post` and `classic_editor_enabled_editors_for_post_type` filters. Can be used by other plugins to control or override the editor used for a particular post of post type. * Added `classic_editor_plugin_settings` filter. Can be used by other plugins to override the settings and disable the settings UI. = 0.5 = * Updated for Gutenberg 4.1 and WordPress 5.0-beta1. * Removed some functionality that now exists in Gutenberg. * Fixed redirecting back to the classic editor after looking at post revisions. = 0.4 = * Fixed removing of the "Try Gutenberg" call-out when the Gutenberg plugin is not activated. * Fixed to always show the settings and the settings link in the plugins list table. * Updated the readme text. = 0.3 = * Updated the option from a checkbox to couple of radio buttons, seems clearer. Thanks to @designsimply for the label text suggestions. * Some general updates and cleanup. = 0.2 = * Update for Gutenberg 1.9. * Remove warning and automatic deactivation when Gutenberg is not active. = 0.1 = Initial release. == Frequently Asked Questions == = Default settings = When activated and when using a classic (non-block) theme, this plugin will restore the previous ("classic") WordPress editor and hide the new block editor ("Gutenberg"). These settings can be changed at the Settings => Writing screen. = Default settings for network installation = There are two options: * When network-activated and when using a classic (non-block) theme, this plugin will set the classic editor as default and prevent site administrators and users from changing editors. The settings can be changed and default network-wide editor can be selected on the Network Settings screen. * When not network-activated each site administrator will be able to activate the plugin and choose options for their users. = Cannot find the "Switch to classic editor" link = It is in the main block editor menu, see this [screenshot](https://ps.w.org/classic-editor/assets/screenshot-7.png?rev=2023480). = Does this work with full site editing and block themes? = No, as block themes rely on blocks. [See Block themes article](https://wordpress.org/support/article/block-themes/) for more information. == Screenshots == 1. Admin settings on the Settings -> Writing screen. 2. User settings on the Profile screen. Visible when the users are allowed to switch editors. 3. "Action links" to choose alternative editor. Visible when the users are allowed to switch editors. 4. Link to switch to the block editor while editing a post in the classic editor. Visible when the users are allowed to switch editors. 5. Link to switch to the classic editor while editing a post in the block editor. Visible when the users are allowed to switch editors. 6. Network settings to select the default editor for the network and allow site admins to change it. 7. The "Switch to classic editor" link. The most important PsychoAge and SubjAge features belonged to the categories of closer relationships and health – JNO Construction & Design

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The most important PsychoAge and SubjAge features belonged to the categories of closer relationships and health

The most important PsychoAge and SubjAge features belonged to the categories of closer relationships and health

PsychoAge and SubjAge provide better than baseline estimates for chronological age and subjective age, respectively, in MIDUS 2 (N samples = 3870) and in MIDUS Refresher (N = 2521). (A) https://kissbridesdate.com/web-stories/top-10-hot-iranian-women/ PsychoAge chronological age predictions in MIDUS 2 (MAE = 7.18 years; epsilon-accuracy = 0.73). (B) SubjAge subjective age predictions in MIDUS 2 (MAE = 8.53 years; epsilon accuracy = 0.66). (C) PsychoAge chronological age predictions in MIDUS Refresher (MAE = 7.73 years; epsilon-accuracy = 0.70). (D) SubjAge subjective age predictions in MIDUS Refresher (MAE = 8.56 years; epsilon accuracy = 0.65). Red lines mark ordinary least squares regressions. R2 stands for “coefficient of determination”, MAE stands for “Mean Absolute Error”, ?-acc stands for “epsilon-accuracy”.

The predictions displayed in the scatter plot were obtained during CV. Red lines mark ordinary least squares regressions. R2 stands for “coefficient of determination”, MAE stands for “Mean Absolute Error”, ?-acc stands for “epsilon-accuracy”.

Psycho-social feature importance analysis

We explored the importance of the features used by PsychoAge and SubjAge using PFI and DFS techniques on MIDUS 1. Scores produced by them were normalized and averaged to yield two feature lists in which all features were ranked according to the magnitude of their effect on model output ( Figure 4 ).

PsychoAge and SubjAge use the same variables to predict chronological and subjective age, but assign different importance to them. (A) Top-25 important features for estimating chronological age with PsychoAge. Features not present in the SubjAge top-25 list (marked by arrows): “health compared to others your age”, “neuroticism personality trait”, “middle age upper limit (men)”, “control over life in general now for psychological age prediction. (B) Top-25 important features for estimating subjective age with SubjAge. Features not present in the PsychoAge top-25 list (marked by arrows): “rate current work situation”, “extraversion personality trait”, “openness personality trait”, “shortness of breath while walking up a slight hill”, “rate sex life currently”, “positive reappraisal (secondary control)”. Mean importance is the normalized mean of PFI and DFS importance scores.

The “headaches frequency (30 days)” variable was ranked fifth most important for PsychoAge, while in SubjAge it was ranked only ninth.

Interestingly, the top-25 feature lists are quite dissimilar between PsychoAge and SubjAge. We explored these dissimilarities to see which features determine the difference between psychological aging and human idea of it (subjective aging). Variables such as (i) “health compared to others your age”, (ii) “neuroticism personality trait”, (iii) “middle age upper limit (men)”, and (iv) “control over life in general” are identified as important only in PsychoAge ( Figure 4A ). Conversely, some variables were important only for SubjAge predictions: “rate current work situation”, (ii) “extraversion personality trait”, (iii) “openness personality trait”, (iv) “shortness of breath while walking up a slight hill”, (v) “rate sex life currently”, and (vi) “positive reappraisal (secondary control)” ( Figure 4B ).

More specifically, top-5 important features in both these aging clocks contained variables describing “rate sex life in 10 years” and “marital status” (closer relationships category), as well as “health limits on vigorous activity”, “prescription medications for blood pressure” (health category)

Note that neuroticism was the only big five personality trait present in the top-25 features for PsychoAge. In the meantime, openness and extraversion are the only big five personality traits important for SubjAge prediction. This finding can be interpreted as neurotic tendencies being inherent to psychological aging, while changes in openness and extraversion are much less significant parts of this process. They, however, greatly affect the personal perception of age.

Feature importance analysis with PFI and DFS is sufficient to determine the significance of features in absolute terms, but it does not convey any information on the direction of change. Other methods should be employed to associate psychological aging, for example, with increasing or decreasing neuroticism (see “Results: Psychological aging across different age groups”).

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