![]() Click the “edit tags” button in the top menu to delete an existing tag (note it will only list the first 20 because those are the only ones that are indexed and searchable) or “add tags” to add a new tag to the post. This part should be pretty straightforward. If the post you’re trying to find is not recent, your best bet will be using the browser search (Ctrl+F on Windows, ⌘+Z on Mac), however, this will only search within the tiny snippet of text in the previews, not the whole post. All you’re given is a cluttered wall of thumbnail previews with tiny snippets of text and no way to search or filter posts other than by the month they were published. This is easier said than done and the part that makes the mass post editor so annoying. Step 2: Find the post you want to edit and click on it. ![]() Note: If you want to edit a post that’s NOT on your main blog just append the sideblog name to the end of the link. Here's how to access the mass post editor: Click 'Account' on the left. You'll want to look at the curl extension to make your requests. The simplest language you can use for this task is PHP. You'll want to use the id paramater along with /post/edit, which again takes tags as a string. You can also mass-delete posts using this tool. After you get a listing of posts you'll want to iterate over it and modify the tags parameter provided in the response for each post. Alternatively, click this link or copypaste it into your browser: The mass post editor opens an archive view of your blog and allows you to make changes to several posts at once.
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