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✨ 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 Qubely: advanced block usage charted

Qubely adds dozens of qubely/* Gutenberg blocks (row, advanced-list, image-comparison, animated-headline, tabs, accordion, contact-form) that get serialised into post_content on every page that uses them. SleekView Charts reads that content and builds a dashboard of total Qubely pages, top block types, author footprint, and edit cadence.

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SleekView Charts dashboard for Qubely - Advanced Gutenberg Blocks

Read your Qubely block usage as charts, not page lists

Qubely adds an extensive set of Gutenberg blocks under the qubely/* namespace (qubely/row, qubely/advanced-list, qubely/image-comparison, qubely/animated-headline, qubely/tabs, qubely/accordion, qubely/contact-form). Whenever an editor drops one of these blocks onto a page, the configuration is serialised into the post_content column on wp_posts as an HTML comment such as <!-- wp:qubely/row -->. The default WordPress admin has no view that summarises which Qubely blocks are used where.

SleekView Charts reads the same wp_posts rows and parses post_content to surface Qubely usage. A Number card pins total posts and pages containing at least one qubely/* block. A Donut splits usage across the top Qubely block types. A Bar ranks authors by Qubely pages built, and an Area card maps edit cadence on that content using post_modified truncated to week.

This is not a replacement for the Gutenberg editor or Qubely's interactivity options. Qubely still owns block rendering, the toolset, and the inspector. SleekView Charts adds the reporting surface neither WordPress nor Qubely shipped: which advanced blocks the site actually depends on, how usage is concentrated across editors, and how active those pages still are, all from the same post_content the front end already renders on every page load.

Workflow

From qubely/* comments to a chart dashboard

1

Point SleekView at wp_posts

Add a SleekView data source for wp_posts filtered to post_status publish across posts and pages. SleekView scans post_content for qubely/* block comments and exposes a parsed column listing the Qubely block names used on each row in the table.
2

Switch the view to Charts

Flip the view from Table to Charts. SleekView opens a blank dashboard ready for chart cards built on the parsed Qubely block column, plus post type, status, author, and modified date from wp_posts and wp_users.
3

Add chart cards

Drop a Number card for total Qubely pages, a Donut for the top block types used, a Bar for authors ranked by Qubely pages owned, and an Area card for edit cadence on Qubely content week by week.
4

Save and share the dashboard

Name the view ("Qubely usage", "Advanced blocks audit") and gate access by WordPress capability so agency leads, editors, and clients each see the chart cards that match their assigned role and scope.

Sample dashboard

Charts you can build from Qubely data

Four cards that turn the qubely/* comments inside post_content into a working advanced-block usage dashboard inside WordPress.
Number · Default

Total Qubely pages

A single big-number KPI counting rows in wp_posts where post_content contains at least one qubely/* block comment and post_status is publish, across posts and pages.
Count
Pie · Donut

Top Qubely blocks used

A donut split across the top Qubely blocks (qubely/row, qubely/advanced-list, qubely/image-comparison, qubely/animated-headline, qubely/tabs, qubely/accordion) parsed from post_content.
Count group by block_name
Bar · Horizontal

Posts by author

A horizontal bar ranking WordPress users by how many posts and pages they own that contain a qubely/* block, resolved against wp_users so ownership shows by display name.
Count group by post_author
Area · Gradient

Edits per week

A gradient area chart of edits per week sourced from post_modified on rows that contain qubely/* blocks, useful for spotting freeze windows and campaign pushes on Qubely-built pages.
Count group by post_modified

Comparison

Default WordPress admin vs SleekView Charts for Qubely

Default WordPress posts list

  • No built-in chart view of Qubely usage, only a paginated post list in admin
  • Total count of posts containing Qubely blocks needs manual SQL or a script
  • Top block type mix (row, advanced-list, animated-headline) is invisible
  • No time-series view of Qubely page edit activity by week or by month
  • Author footprint on Qubely-built content is not summarised in the admin

SleekView Charts

  • Number cards counting posts that use any qubely/* block
  • Donut cards splitting usage across top Qubely block names used
  • Bar cards ranking authors by Qubely pages built and owned
  • Area or Line cards plotting edits per week from post_modified
  • Same filters (post type, author, date) apply to every chart card at once

Features

What SleekView Charts gives you for Qubely - Advanced Gutenberg Blocks

Real block names drive real charts

Charts pull from post_content on wp_posts and parse the qubely/* comments WordPress already writes. Every chart card references an actual Qubely block name, no exports, no spreadsheet pivots, no shadow registry of blocks used on each page.

Filters carry across cards

Set a date range, a post type, or an author filter once and every chart card on the dashboard respects it. The block-usage table and the executive chart view share one saved Qubely configuration without drift or divergence.

Editorial pulse as a curve

Group by post_modified truncated to week to chart Qubely editing activity over time. Quiet weeks, freeze periods, and campaign pushes become visible without scrolling endless revision histories or spelunking through database backups.

Audience

Who builds Qubely chart dashboards with SleekView

Agencies

Client-facing dashboards with total Qubely pages, top block types in use, and an editing activity trend, refreshed live on every embed view across the network.

Editors

Block-by-author and weekly edit volume on one screen so workload and Qubely content ownership are visible without a status meeting or a separate tracking spreadsheet.

Site owners

A donut of Qubely block types plus a stale-pages count surfaces which advanced blocks the site truly depends on before a theme migration or plugin swap breaks them.

The bigger picture

Why Qubely sites deserve a chart view

Qubely is one of the more ambitious advanced Gutenberg block libraries and the breadth of its blocks is what makes it useful and risky at the same time. A site that adopted Qubely a year or two ago has probably sprouted qubely/row layouts everywhere, plus animated headlines, image comparisons, tab groups, accordions, and contact forms scattered across landing pages. WordPress itself does not track which advanced blocks are used where.

The Pages and Posts lists show titles and authors with no block dimension at all. On a mature site this debt matters. Plugins get audited, themes get migrated, and nobody can answer the basic question of how many pages depend on which Qubely block.

SleekView Charts reads the post_content WordPress already serves, parses the qubely/* block comments, and turns each block name into a chart source. A Number card answers how many pages use Qubely at all. A Donut answers which Qubely blocks carry the weight.

An Area card answers whether that content is being maintained or has gone stale. Qubely keeps owning the editor, the chart view gives the inventory a home.

Questions

Common questions about SleekView Charts for Qubely - Advanced Gutenberg Blocks

Directly from wp_posts. SleekView scans the post_content column for qubely/* block comments that Gutenberg writes when an editor inserts a Qubely block. The block names are parsed into a column SleekView can group on. Chart cards reflect current data as soon as a post is saved through the standard WordPress update path, no shadow registry.

 

Yes. Group a Donut or Bar card by the parsed Qubely block name and SleekView splits the chart across qubely/row, qubely/advanced-list, qubely/image-comparison, qubely/animated-headline, qubely/tabs, qubely/accordion, qubely/contact-form, and any other block in the namespace. Filter to a single post type for narrower audits when needed.

 

Group an Area or Line card by post_modified truncated to week or month, aggregated by Count, filtered to rows whose post_content contains a qubely/* block. The curve shows when Qubely content is being touched, useful for tracking campaign cadence, freeze windows, and stretches of zero activity that mark stale pages ready for review.

 

Yes. View-level filters such as post type, status, author, and date range apply to every chart card on the dashboard. One saved configuration drives both the audit table view and the chart view, so block-usage housekeeping and reporting stay in sync without keeping two views aligned by hand inside the WordPress admin.

 

Yes. The base query hits indexed columns on wp_posts (post_type, post_status, post_modified, post_author). The qubely/* block name extraction is cached per post so the group-by column reads from a small lookup, keeping the dashboard fast even on large sites with thousands of posts running advanced block layouts on every page.

 

Yes. Group a Bar card by post_author and aggregate by Count over rows whose post_content contains a qubely/* block. The chart resolves IDs against wp_users and renders display names, so ownership of Qubely content is clear when planning training, handover, or migration off a specific advanced block.

 

Charts are read-only summaries by design. To act on a chart insight, switch to the audit table filtered to the same slice (for example the stale segment of a block-type donut) and open the post directly in the Gutenberg editor. Edits route through the standard WordPress update path so every Qubely block renders exactly as before.

 

Qubely does not ship a reporting screen for its own block usage, so there is nothing to replace. SleekView Charts adds a reporting surface on top of the post_content WordPress and Qubely already write, so the plugin keeps owning the editor experience and the chart view owns the summary across the whole site.

 

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