i now I saw what you did in default.php. Thank you very much, but the idea was different. I wanted to show the information in that plugin, not to code to show that information. It is an emergency solution and not a professional one. it is an emergency solution and not a professional one. It doesn't look too good. It doesn't display what it should - those articles are the most read, not the author's.
It's wonderful what you did. I'm really excited. But the plugin manages all 200 authors on the site. The photo of the author, data from the biography, links to his pages on facebook, linkdin, twitter, etc. are presented. That was the idea. I wanted to see the plugin, not necessarily the code.
The plugin goes in Casiopeia and looks ok. It's a simple plugin, no complicated stuff. In your template, for reasons unknown to me, it does not work.
Do you think you can give me a suggestion?
PS: The studies clearly show that it is important that in an article, especially in magazines (as is our case), the author's biography should be at the end of the article. It is a basic condition for the success of an article. Extended bibliographies can be made in secondary pages as it is in your template. That's why I chose your template which is inspired. But to be extraordinary we have to think about how it is used by our customers. In our case, the readers of magazine articles. If you want to enrich your experience, I recommend the following article from a UX expert that I'm sure you know: https://www.nngroup.com/articles/bylines-for-web-articles/