Compatibility
Compatibility is where most plugin sites get vague. Bialty should not.
The right way to talk about compatibility is to separate documented support, strong fit, and real-world validation needs.
Strongest compatibility zone
Bialty is strongest when content is rendered through the standard WordPress frontend flow.
That includes the classic editorial path on:
- posts
- pages
- featured images in the standard rendering pipeline
- content blocks that pass through expected frontend filters
SEO plugins
Bialty is designed to work with contextual SEO signals from:
- Yoast SEO
- Rank Math
- All in One SEO
These integrations matter because they give Bialty a clean source for focus-keyword-style logic.
WooCommerce
WooCommerce belongs to the commercial scope.
The product is positioned for:
- product pages
- product image workflows
- gallery-related settings
- catalog testing via the paid trial
That said, WooCommerce output can vary because themes, builders, and custom templates often reshape product HTML. Real validation is still required on the live stack.
Builders and editors
Documented builders and editors include:
- Gutenberg
- TinyMCE / classic content flows
- Elementor
- SiteOrigin
Important nuance:
Bialty can only affect what passes through the expected WordPress frontend path. A builder that stores or renders content in a custom way can limit or change the result.
Beaver Builder note
Beaver Builder deserves a specific note.
The product includes a known special case for Beaver Builder edit mode. That means you should not talk about Beaver Builder as a blanket “yes” without qualification. The right phrasing is:
validate frontend behavior separately from builder edit mode.
Areas outside the default promise
Do not present these areas as automatic wins without testing:
- headers
- footers
- sidebars
- custom widgets
- template zones outside the standard content flow
- heavily customized product templates
Compatibility table
| Area | Status | How to talk about it |
|---|---|---|
| Posts and pages | Strong fit | Core product scope. Safe to document clearly. |
| Yoast SEO, Rank Math, AIOSEO | Documented signal sources | Use the wording “when those signals are available on the site.” |
| WooCommerce | Commercial scope | Document as supported, but require theme validation for rollout. |
| Elementor and SiteOrigin | Validate on output | Works when the builder output follows the expected frontend path. |
| Beaver Builder edit mode | Special case | Call out edit mode separately from published frontend behavior. |
| Headers, footers, sidebars | Outside default promise | Do not promise broad coverage without project-specific testing. |
Recommended validation workflow
Before calling a stack “compatible”, validate:
- a published page or product on the frontend;
- the rendered HTML after cache purge;
- the real theme template in use;
- any builder-specific view that differs from the normal frontend.
Bottom line
Compatibility is not a badge list. It is a rendering question.
The strongest, safest claim is this:
Bialty works best where WordPress output stays close to the standard frontend rendering pipeline.