✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount

SleekView Charts for Plugin Organizer

SleekView Charts reads the per-URL filters and plugin groups Plugin Organizer writes and renders pages by rule count, group coverage and plugins toggled most often as Number, Pie, Bar and Area cards.

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SleekView Charts dashboard for Plugin Organizer

URL-based plugin filters are a system, not a list

Plugin Organizer is the original per-URL plugin loader: define groups of plugins, attach them to URL patterns or roles, and decide which plugins load on which request. Powerful, and after a few months of use, surprisingly large. The plugin's own admin lists filters one row at a time and groups one screen at a time.

SleekView Charts reads the same filters and groups as a flat dataset. A Number card counts URL filters in place. A Pie splits filters across the groups they belong to. A Bar counts the plugins toggled most often across all filters. An Area trends filter creation over time so a tuning sprint shows up as a visible bump.

Plugin Organizer's own settings stay where they are for adding and editing filters. The dashboard view is the audit, refactor and migration layer on a system that grows by accretion.

Workflow

Turn Plugin Organizer's data into a dashboard

1

Read filters and groups

SleekView reads Plugin Organizer's custom post types for filters and groups, flattening each filter into rows with URL pattern, group, action and plugin list.
2

Compose the chart cards

Pick Number, Pie, Bar, Area, Radar or Radial cards. Group by group, action, plugin or filter_created, and aggregate as Count, Sum, Average, Minimum or Maximum on plugin counts.
3

Save and scope the dashboard

Name it ("Plugin Organizer health", "Most-toggled plugins") and gate by WordPress capability so dev, ops and audit each see the slice they need.
4

Share or export

Send a developer a read-only URL or export the underlying filtered set to CSV. The next refactor starts from a real inventory of filters and groups.

Sample dashboard

Charts you can build from Plugin Organizer data

Each card below reads filters and groups Plugin Organizer already manages. Mix them for an audit dashboard before a refactor, a group-coverage view or a migration cockpit.
Number · Default

Active filters

Single KPI counting Plugin Organizer URL filters currently in place. The anchor metric for assessing how heavily per-URL tuning has been applied.
Count
Pie · Donut text

Filters by group

Splits filters across the plugin groups they belong to. Shows whether the system is balanced across a few coherent groups or scattered into ad-hoc filters.
Count group by group
Bar · Horizontal

Plugins toggled most often

Counts filter participation by plugin. Plugins at the top of the bar are the ones the team keeps reaching for and worth a closer look during a refactor.
Count group by plugin
Area · Gradient

Filters created per week

Time series of filter creation. A performance sprint shows up clearly; flat stretches mark periods where the configuration has not been touched.
Count group by filter_created

Comparison

Default Plugin Organizer admin vs SleekView Charts

Default filters list

  • Filters and groups screens show one row or screen at a time
  • No visual split of filters across groups
  • Plugin participation across filters is invisible without manual counting
  • No trend of filter creation to spot when tuning has stalled
  • Audit handoff means screenshots or CSV-by-hand

SleekView Charts

  • KPI card for active URL filters across the install
  • Pie split of filters across plugin groups
  • Bar of the plugins that show up in the most filters
  • Area trend of filter creation for sprint planning
  • Filters carry between table and chart view on the same dataset

Features

What SleekView Charts gives you for Plugin Organizer

Configuration as a shape

Render filters and groups as Number, Pie, Bar and Area cards so the size and concentration of the system are visible at a glance.

Filters span table and chart

Filter to group = checkout and the chart cards and the table view both narrow to the checkout group only. Audits get scoped against a real subset.

Refactor-ready share

Export the filters behind a card as CSV or share the dashboard URL with the developer planning the next migration. The conversation starts with real data.

Audience

Who builds Plugin Organizer charts dashboards with SleekView

Performance engineers

Audit URL filters across the install before a tuning sprint. The most-toggled plugins are obvious candidates for global disabling or replacement.

Migration leads

Before retiring a plugin, see exactly which filters and groups reference it. Plan the migration against a real list instead of grepping the database.

Agency ops

Hand a client team a read-only inventory of their per-URL plugin configuration. Performance work stops being a black box and gets a measurable surface.

The bigger picture

Why per-URL plugin systems need an aggregate view

Plugin Organizer is one of the older and more powerful answers to WordPress's load-everything-on-every-request problem, and after a few months of real use it has a habit of becoming larger than anyone remembers. Filters multiply, groups overlap, and the per-URL settings tree is the only way to see them. SleekView Charts gives the same configuration a shape: a KPI of active filters, a pie of filters per group, a bar of plugins toggled most often and a trend of filter creation.

The plugin's own admin stays where it is for adding and editing. The dashboard is the audit and governance layer that turns a long list of URL filters into a system you can actually reason about, especially during a refactor, a migration or a quarterly review.

Questions

Common questions about SleekView Charts for Plugin Organizer

Plugin Organizer's custom post types for filters and groups, plus the per-URL plugin lists each filter holds. SleekView flattens those into rows with URL pattern, group, action and plugin as columns.

 

Yes. A Bar card grouped by plugin counts filter participation per plugin slug. The top of the bar is the obvious candidate list for global disabling or for replacement on the next refactor.

 

Yes. SleekView surfaces each filter's group as a column and a Pie or Bar grouped by group splits the filter set across the groups defined in Plugin Organizer. Useful for spotting groups that have outgrown their original scope.

 

Yes. Group by filter_created on an Area or Line card with a Count aggregation to see filters created per week or month. Performance sprints show up as visible bumps in the trend.

 

No. SleekView reads filters and groups. It never adds, edits or deletes them. All editing happens inside Plugin Organizer's own admin where its conflict-handling and ordering logic live.

 

Yes. Add a filter for group = checkout (or any specific group) and the whole dashboard narrows to filters that belong to that group. Each group can have its own dedicated cockpit.

 

No. Plugin Organizer stays the per-URL operations tool. SleekView Charts is the aggregate surface on the same data, useful exactly when the question is system-wide rather than about one filter.

 

Yes. Any filtered set behind a chart card exports as CSV. Useful for refactor planning, agency handover or compliance reviews where the per-URL plugin loadout needs to be documented.

 

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