What is it?
The Graceful Pull-Quotes plugin (formerly “JavaScript Pull-Quotes”) is an add-on for WordPress that allows you to easily insert pull-quotes into your posts and pages. It uses client-side JavaScript specifically because, as a purely visual effect, it seems appropriate to avoid “doubling up” the text for people on text-only browsers or older browser that probably won’t properly handle the CSS involved. If a browser has JavaScript turned off, or otherwise somehow can’t handle the pull-quotes, then they should be completely invisible and out of the way.
How do I use it?
The plugin will look for any text that is inside a tag with a class of “pullquote”, and turn it into a pull-quote. <span class="pullquote">This sentence is a pull-quote, for example</span> — though in a real post the span tags will not be visible to readers as they are in this case! Via separate plugin you can add an automatic “Pull-quote” button to the post editor screen (see “extras” in the download); otherwise you should be able to add the <span> manually.
If you like, you can specify a particular side for a particular quote. To do this, simply set the span’s class to “pullquote pqRight” or “pullquote pqLeft”. This will put that one pull-quote on the chosen side completely independently of any other side-related options in use.
There is a options panel in the WordPress admin screen that allows you to set various options. I recommend you check it out before adding any pull-quotes to posts — you can find it under the Presentation section.
In the aforementioned options panel there is a control to select a style for pull-quotes, much like selecting a Theme in WordPress. There is also a preview button, so you can see what a particular style looks like without having to activate it first.
Sometimes you have a sentence with some subsidiary clause that you don’t want to include in the pull-quote. We’ve got you covered. If you have some text that you want to quote, but leave out extraneous, repetitious, or just plain unnecessary text, you put the alternate text in an <!-- HTML comment --> immediately inside the span. This last part is important — <span class="pullquote"><!-- You can put any alternate text you want in the comment -->the comment must be the very first thing inside the span</span>: no spaces, quote marks, or anything else comes first. (Again, the spans and comments will not be visible to your readers — this is just for demonstration purposes!).
Using alternate text in this way is of course completely optional If you like to keep things simple, just put the quotable text in a span as noted above and you’ll be fine. That’s about all there is to it.
Features
- The plugin is fully language-aware and ready for localization. German (Thanks Mattias), French (Merci Ben), Persian, and Italian localizations are included.
- Styles menu. The Options panel has a drop down menu that allows you to choose a visual style for your pull-quotes. Styles are easily customized and open for third-party contributions (similar to WordPress Themes).
- Preview styles without activating them
- A pull-quote style can be embedded in a WordPress theme. If the active theme has a file called “jspullquotes.css” in it, that will be used automatically.
- You can specify a side for a particular quote. To use, set span class to “pullquote pqRight” or “pullquote pqLeft”
- Successive pull-quotes can alternate sides
- Optionally strips links out of the quote text
- Have pull-quotes that differ from the “auto-quoted” text
- Allow user to choose default side
- Advanced options to specify the HTML tag and CSS classes to be used
Installation
Download the file, unzip it, and put the jspullquotes folder into your blog’s wp-content/plugins/ directory. Next activate it in the WordPress Plugins panel.
Download
- jspullquotes.zip v. 2.3
- jspullquotes.zip v. 1.7 (for WP versions lower than 2.5)
Is this download worth something to you? If you have found this system useful, please consider making a donation. Even as little as a dollar is appreciated:
Comments and suggestions are welcome.
Share the Love
If you like this plugin, please spread the word! I’ve made one o’ them handy sidebar link images that you can download and put on your own blog. Please link it to this page, of course! Here’s the image; just right-click and save:
![]()
Or, if you have the plugin installed, you can simply paste the following into your sidebar (you may need to change the image “src” path, depending on your site):
<a href="http://striderweb.com/nerdaphernalia/features/wp-javascript-pull-quotes/"><img src="/wp-content/plugins/jspullquotes/extras/jspullquotes.png" alt="JS Pull-Quotes" title="JavaScript Pull-Quotes" height="15" width="80" /></a>
Acknowledgements
Thanks to Roger Johansson and “Viper007Bond” for laying much of the groundwork that led to this plugin. See the readme.txt file included with the download for further details.
Thanks to Mattias for the German translation, Ben for the French, and to my wife’s friend Toni’s cousin Ralph for the Italian.
Last but not least, thanks to the fine folks at WordPress who made this all possible.
Troubleshooting/ Work-Arounds
- If you want to use this effect on a non-WordPress website, I suggest you check out the original script on Roger’s site, or my “no links” version.
- PROBLEM: You install it and nothing happens when you add the span tags to your post. SOLUTION: It may be your theme. Check in the
header.phpfile — the following line must appear somewhere in the section of your page (usually toward the end):
<?php wp_head(); ?> - BUG: There are issues with accented letters within alternate text comments that need to be fixed
- You may have noticed “alternate text” pull-quotes throwing errors when you have a double-dash in them. This is an obscure technicality of HTML rearing its head. Technically speaking, a double-dash ends an HTML comment, and that means the comment is ending earlier than you want it to.
- There is a bug in the JavaScript rendering of certain less common browsers, (such as older versions of Safari), which causes it to miss the alternate text. Assuming that some of your users probably do use these browser, you have two options:
- Do the alternate text as described. The buggy browsers will show the *actual* text in the span as though the alternate were not there.
- Put the comment alone in a pullquote span, just before the sentence you’re (sort of) quoting. Buggy browsers will not show any pullquote, but other browsers will work normally. Example:
<span class="pullquote"><!-- Darn that browser! --></span>Darn that Javascript-mangling browser!

209 Comments
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“If you are not using the rich-text editor in WordPress, there is actually an automatic “Pull-quote” button in the post editor screen; otherwise you should be able to add the manually”.
Hi, Stephen:
I’m not seeing the pullquote button on my post editor screen. Please advise, as this is a plugin i plan to use alot.
Missy — Quicktags are no longer built-in. Take a look in the “extras” folder.
New version 2.2 is up.
Improvements:
Hi
I have a small css inheritance problem. Maybe…
Blockquote of style I’m using has white text on gray background and I’m totally happy with that. Your plugin, <blockquote> and , is using white background or getting it from somewhere but text in white too. Because of css of style propably. So, how do I change the color of text in your css? I dont speak css too well…
BTW, finnish translation is coming in one days time if you dont already have it.
Regars.
Hello Stephen,
The PullQuotes work great, but Umlauts are not rendered correclty (shown as “ä” etc.) when I have another Plugin (WP-CleanUmlauts) is activated. Is there a possibility to circumvent that without needing to deactivate WP-CleanUmlauts?
Georg — Could you email that plugin to me?
Jakke — If you look in the /plugins/jspullquotes folder, you’ll see a folder called “styles”. That folder contains the different styles that appear in the dropdown in the admin screen. There is another css file that loads always — called jspullquotes-core.css — it’s in the resources folder.
Note: If you’re going to make changes to a style, I recommend you instead make a new custom style. Make a copy of one of the files in “styles”, and modify it all you like. The name of the file is the name that shows up in the admin Styles list.
[edit: to change text color, look for the following in the CSS:
color: #xxxxxx;]
That was the first thing I did. It didn’t work and thats why I’m wondering about some inheritance problen.
But I’ll try the …core.css and a totally new style.
Thanks.
I can change everything else but color of font. Interesting.
Okey, the problem almost solved out. It was a one type of inheritance problem. When style.css says something like:
#content blockquote p{
color: #696969;
margin: 0px 0px 10px 0px;
padding: 10px 0px 0px 0px;
}
we can’t override it in css of the plugin just with color: #something; Or I can’t anyway
Jakke –
I’ve put a fix in the core file, so this shouldn’t be a problem in the next release.
I translated the plugin into Persian but it does not work. I created the .po and .mo files using Poedit, and named the mo file as “jspullquotes-ir_IR.mo”. It is placed in the folder “languages” but still it does not work. What can be the problem?
Sourena — Is the rest of WordPress admin showing up in Persian? The .mo file should be in the jspullquotes/languages folder.
If you send me the .po file, I’ll include your translation in the next version of the download.
Hey, awesome plugin–the only problem is that it doesn’t appear to work with AJAXed WordPress. If I view the single post only, then it’s fine, but if I expand the post from the excerpt, no good. =/
[...] ????? ?? ?????? ?????????? ????? ? ????? ?? ?????? ??????? ?????? ??? ????-?????, ? ??????? ???????? ?????? ????? ????? [...]
Gorgeous results from this plugin…thanks so much!
[...] I started looking around for a WordPress plugin that would do pull quotes nicely. I found one pretty quickly, courtesy [...]
[...] wordpress, sebenarnya sudah ada plugin kusus untuk menangani pullquote ini. plugin bisa di dapatkan di sini. Namun menurut saya, selama manual masih bisa kenapa memakai plugins kasian blog banyak plugins yg [...]
Excellent plugin, thanks ever so much! – Just one thing… Umlauts are not rendered correctly when inserted as HTML comments. Is there any way to fix that? – Thanks again!
GREAT plugin, and thanks!
I am having one problem, though. The plugin does the pullquote just fine, but it ALSO adds a duplicate of the pullquote into the main text itself.
So if I pullquote this sentence, I have the pullquote, the original sentence and an additional sentence where the pullquote span is.
Any ideas?
Nevermind. I am a doofus. RTFMed and all is well, now.
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