Now you can scroll down to the “Additional Labels” section.This section allows you to publish a description of your content type for posts.
These labels will be used in your WordPress dashboard when you edit and manage content for each individual taxonomy.
Next is the Settings option. This section allows you to set up different attributes for each taxonomy you create. Each option has a description that describes its function.
Create custom taxonomy hierarchy
In the screenshot above you can see that we have structured this taxonomy hierarchically.
This means that our “Topics” taxonomy can have belgium telegram data subtopics. For example, a topic called “Fiction” can have subtopics like “Fantasy,” “Thriller,” “Mystery,” and more.
There are many other settings further down the screen in your WordPress dashboard, but for this tutorial you can leave them as they are.
You can now click the “Add Taxonomy” button at the bottom to save your custom taxonomy.
You can then edit the content type associated with this taxonomy in the WordPress editor to use it.
Using taxonomy in post editor
Manually creating custom taxonomies (with code)
This method requires you to add code to your WordPress website. If you haven't done so already, we recommend checking out our guide on how to easily add code snippets in WordPress .
Labeling your WordPress taxonomy
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