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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

SleekView for User Role Editor

User Role Editor stores role definitions in wp_options and assigns them through wp_usermeta. SleekView joins both into one sortable, filterable table so capability sprawl and role assignments stay visible.

♾️ Lifetime License available

SleekView table view for User Role Editor

URE roles and assignments become one audit queue

User Role Editor writes role definitions into the wp_user_roles option and any custom capabilities back to the wp_capabilities key in wp_usermeta per user. The plugin's UI walks one role at a time, which is fine for editing and slow when an audit asks how many users hold a sensitive capability.

SleekView reads the role option and joins it against wp_users and wp_usermeta. Each row is a user-role pairing with the capability list expanded as columns. Sort by role, filter by capability, search by user name, all in one workspace.

URE keeps owning role and capability editing. SleekView only adds the inventory surface, so saved views like Users with publish_pages or Custom roles only become a one-click reopen instead of a SQL query.

Workflow

From URE roles to a sortable audit table in four steps

1

Connect the URE dataset

SleekView surfaces wp_user_roles joined to wp_users and wp_usermeta as a single dataset, pre-mapped to user, role, and capability columns.
2

Pick the audit columns

User, email, role, capability set, last login. Five columns cover the questions a quarterly access review usually asks.
3

Save the audit view

Filter to role equals administrator or capability equals manage_options, save it, and reopen during the next review.
4

Pivot to Kanban or Chart

The same dataset feeds Table, Kanban, Feedback, and Charts views, so the team can switch surfaces without rebuilding the query.

Sample columns

A typical User Role Editor audit view

URE assignments with user, role, key capabilities, and last login on one row.
Source: wp_user_roles option joined to wp_users and wp_usermeta
User Email Role Capabilities Status Last login
alex@acme.com alex@acme.com Administrator manage_options, edit_users Active 1h ago
jamie jamie@acme.com Editor edit_pages, publish_pages Active 2d ago
sam sam@acme.com Custom: Reviewer edit_posts, moderate_comments Active 5d ago
pat pat@acme.com Author edit_posts, upload_files Idle 63d ago
intern intern@acme.com Contributor edit_posts Stale

Comparison

Default User Role Editor admin vs SleekView

Default URE role editor screens

  • URE edits one role or one user at a time, no aggregate view
  • There is no native inventory of users per role
  • Capability distribution requires opening each role manually
  • Cross-role audits need SQL or a separate audit plugin
  • Exports are per-screen rather than per saved query

SleekView

  • Roles, users, and capabilities joined into one table
  • Filter by role, capability, or user metadata
  • Saved views per quarterly review reopen with one click
  • Same dataset feeds Table, Kanban, Feedback, and Charts views
  • CSV export honours active filters and column order

Features

What SleekView gives you for User Role Editor

Capability sprawl visible

A column per capability and a filter on the sensitive ones expose users who quietly accumulated more than they need.

Users-per-role inventory

Group rows by role for a quick view of how many people hold each role, the question every quarterly review asks.

One dataset, every view

Table, Kanban, Feedback, and Charts share one source. Switch views without rebuilding the query.

Audience

Who uses SleekView for User Role Editor

Security and compliance

A capability-distribution view answers SOC2 and ISO questions about who can do what without writing a single SQL query.

HR and ops on large editorial teams

Users-per-role and last-login columns surface onboarding and offboarding gaps in one view.

Agency maintainers

One saved view per client surfaces the URE configuration during quarterly access reviews.

The bigger picture

Capability audits without writing SQL

User Role Editor is the right tool for shaping roles, less so for answering aggregate questions about them. Without an inventory view, the audit question, how many users hold publish_pages, means scrolling user lists or opening a database client. SleekView reads the same data URE persists and renders it as one sortable, filterable table.

The plugin keeps owning role edits, SleekView just surfaces the resulting state. Saved views travel with the site so audits stop being a one-off scramble, and filtered rows export as CSV when an external review asks for evidence. Capability sprawl gets caught earlier when it is visible on a single screen instead of hidden across user pages.

Questions

Common questions about SleekView for User Role Editor

No. It reads role and capability data URE persists. Edits still happen through the URE admin.

 

Yes. Any capability stored in wp_user_roles or wp_capabilities surfaces as a column, regardless of which plugin registered it.

 

Yes. Role is a filterable column, so the view can isolate administrators, editors, or any custom role.

 

No. It renders only in the admin and reads from existing tables. The front end and the URE admin run unchanged.

 

Yes. Each site has its own role table, so the view reflects that site's URE state. Network-wide views require running per site.

 

No. URE owns role and capability editing. SleekView only surfaces the resulting state as a table.

 

Yes. Standard WordPress capability checks gate the view, only users who can read the underlying tables see the rows.

 

Yes. CSV export honours active filters and column order, useful for access-review reports.

 

Pricing

More than 1000+
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What’s included

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