WordPress Front End Login - RegistrationMagic.com https://registrationmagic.com/tag/wordpress-front-end-login/ WordPress User Registrations Forms Plugin Wed, 24 Jul 2024 06:46:27 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 How to setup WordPress frontend login or setup OTP login? https://registrationmagic.com/setup-wordpress-frontend-login-setup-otp-login/ https://registrationmagic.com/setup-wordpress-frontend-login-setup-otp-login/#comments Tue, 26 Jul 2016 20:26:50 +0000 http://registrationmagic.com/?p=20071 While WordPress has come out of its blogging shell, few things are still embedded in its DNA. Registering and logging in the users is one of them. No surprise then, WordPress frontend login is a much searched keyword on Google, and there are good many reasons for it. Let’s save a thousand words and start with […]

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While WordPress has come out of its blogging shell, few things are still embedded in its DNA. Registering and logging in the users is one of them. No surprise then, WordPress frontend login is a much searched keyword on Google, and there are good many reasons for it.

Let’s save a thousand words and start with an image.

lets-login

This ain’t pretty, not by a long shot. And I am not talking about aesthetics. If you are a WordPress site admin, you know what I mean. The default login box that comes with WordPress is exactly what we do not need. It does not looks like part of our site’s theme, practically ‘shouting’ you are using a WordPress site (and do not know how to setup WordPress frontend login which is lame). Also, it adds the queasy thought of users landing in your dashboard area, harmless as it maybe. A visitor should stay on the front end; He or she has no business at the back end. The solution? A WordPress frontend login box that keeps your visitors on your site, and adds a touch of professionalism while at it.

Well, RegistrationMagic makes it pretty easy to do this. You are already aware of how to use shortcode to add forms to your content. If not, please see our last post, since we’ll be once again using a shortcode to add WordPress frontend login form. RegistrationMagic comes by default with a login form. It’s shortcode is simple and easy to remember –

It is also the first form card in Forms Manage and not so hard to miss.

login-card

As with the forms, you can also paste it inside the content with the drop-down menu available above the content editor.

drop-down-login-code

You can put it inside paragraphs, on a blank page, or a post. It also works with widgets. Here’s how it will look on the front end:

login-box-mmt

And with the classic theme:

login-box-classic

 

Now, if the user is logged in already, it will of course, show a message:

logged-in-box

But when a user first logs in, it makes little sense to make him or her stay here and read this message. Usually, we would like to take the user, after a successful login, to another page or area of the site restricted to logged in users. To do this, we’ll change an option in General Settings, inside Global Settings panel. Look out for a drop-down labeled “After Login Redirect User to:” We can select any page from the list for redirection.

redirect-after-login

There’s one more thing. RegistrationMagic supports “One Time Password (OTP)” system. It means users can login using a one-time password, which is not their regular one and good for a single use. This also works when user has not registered on our site as a dashboard user, but has a record in RegistrationMagic “Submissions Manager”. Apart from the security it offers, users can check their submitted forms with just their email.

How do we set it up? Let’s move to Appearance–>Widgets Area.

widgets

Among all the widgets, there’s one called “RegistrationMagic OTP Login”

otp-widget

For the demo, we shall drag it to the sidebar and name it simply “OTP Login”. Let’s check the front end now.

The process is straightforward. User enters his or her email address in the field and hits enter. A random password is generated and emailed to the user. This password can be used to login in the next step. If the user chooses not to login for some reason, password expires in next 24 hours.

We hope you will find this post another useful addition to our series on mastering WordPress registration system. See you soon.

The post How to setup WordPress frontend login or setup OTP login? appeared first on RegistrationMagic.

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