Dashboard Cleaner

Description

Reclaim your admin dashboard: Get rid of annoying banners, unwanted ads and other nuisances.

Dashboard Cleaner allows you to hide any HTML elements from your admin dashboard such as annoying banners, unwanted ads and other nuisances, and basically anything else you want. It works like a DOM inspector: simply point and click on the HTML element you want to hide, select a few options and it’s gone!

Requirements

  • WordPress 3.3+
  • PHP 5.3+

Screenshots

  • Start Dashboard Cleaner from its Toolbar menu.
  • Point and click on the HTML element you want to hide.
  • Select the attribute name/value to filter and click “Create a Filter”.
  • It’s gone!

Installation

  1. Upload the dashboard-cleaner folder to the /wp-content/plugins/ directory.
  2. Activate the plugin through the ‘Plugins’ page in WordPress.
  3. Plugin settings are located in the ‘Tools > Dashboard Cleaner’ sub-menu.

FAQ

Where does Dashboard Cleaner store its data?

Its settings are saved to the database, but the filters are saved to a file named dhcl_xxxxx.filter and located inside the /wp-content/uploads/dashboard-cleaner/ folder (single installation) or the /wp-content/uploads/sites/X/dashboard-cleaner/ folders (multisite installation). Removing or renaming that file will simply delete your filters without affecting Dashboad Cleaner settings.

What is the difference between hiding an element and making it invisible?

Hiding will remove the element and the space it occupies; making it invisible will mask the element but will keep the space it occupies. Hiding the element is the preferrered method but in a few cases, it can wrongly alter the whole page layout.

Shall the filter be based on the exact attribute value, or can it be shortened (i.e., partial match)?

Partial match is accepted but whatever value you enter, it must start and end on a word boundary (as opposed to a substring). For more details about this, see the contextual Help tab in Dashboard Cleaner Settings page.

Are field values case sensitive?

The attribute value is case-sensitive, the HTML element and attribute names aren’t.

Will it slow down my site?

Dashboard Cleaner runs only in the back-end section (admin dashboard) not the front-end, hence it won’t affect your visitors.

Reviews

සැප්තැම්බර් 27, 2018
I’ve been writing routines to try and clean the dashboard but this is far easier and lightweight. I love how you are just able to click and point to the element you want hidden, worked like a charm with WordPress 4.9.8
අගෝස්තු 11, 2017
Klasse, danke. Genau das habe ich lange, lange gesucht! Thx
Read all 4 reviews

Contributors & Developers

“Dashboard Cleaner” is open source software. The following people have contributed to this plugin.

Contributors

Translate “Dashboard Cleaner” into your language.

Interested in development?

Browse the code, check out the SVN repository, or subscribe to the development log by RSS.

Changelog

1.1.6

  • Fixed a deprecated notice on servers running PHP 8+.

1.1.5

  • Added WordPress 5.9 compatibility.

1.1.4

  • Fixed an issue on blogs that are using right to left languages: the settings page was all messed up.

1.1.3

  • WordPress 4.9 compatibility.