It may not do what you expect, it may have serious security issues or it may even not work at all. VERY IMPORTANT Warning: Please be aware that some plugins have not been reviewed, and the quality and/or suitability for your Moodle site has not been checked.
You might consider some plugins for gamification, such as the Quizventure.įor K-12 teaching and learning environments, consider these plugins:įor universities, there is a list of plugins by/for Universities, and a link to discipline-specific plugins, which might be worth considering.Ĭonsiderations for production sites (skip if you're just moodling) All plugins with mobile in their name, are related to mobile devices.If your Moodle site needs assessment beyond the sixteen standard question types included in Moodle core, see the many (49 in 2017) available third party question types.These are given by the plugins guardians and reviewers for particularly useful, well coded or otherwise interesting plugins. Moodle has a list of plugins that have received the Reviewers' choice award.See the list of (year 2015) favorite plugins by Gavin Henrick.You can test and try more than 50 of the most popular Moodle plugins at.It would probably be a good idea to consider them first. These are the plugins most likely to be most useful for most sites. You can find the plugins with the largest number of downloads in the last three months at.Moodle has a list of the most favourite plugins, which might be worth considering for adding to your site :).Note: It is recommended that you proceed with caution and always try installing these plugins in a local experimental server before installing them in a production server. Note: Certain hosting solutions, such as MoodleCloud, prevent plugins being installed from within Moodle. Plugins enable you to add additional features and functionality to Moodle, such as new activities, new quiz question types, new reports, integrations with other systems and many more. 8 Preventing installing plugins from within Moodle.5.3 Default exception handler: Error writing to database Debug: Duplicate entry 'en_us.5.2 A file permissions error has occurred.4.1 Installing directly from the Moodle plugins directory.3 Considerations for production sites (skip if you're just moodling).2 Choosing the best plugins for your site.If you've installed the plug-in correctly but it's still not appearing in Live, see our dedicated article: VST/AU plug-in doesn't appear in Live. Live scans all available plug-ins and once completed they will show up in Live's browser under Plug-Ins.ĩ.
dll extension too, but they may crash Live if included in the VST folder.Ĩ. Make sure that the folder contains only VST. Adding entire drives or system folders may crash Live. Note: only add discrete folders that contain VST plug-ins. In case you prefer to use or add a different VST3 folder of your choice, enable Use VST3 Plug-In Custom Folder, but note that it is not recommended to select the same location for both folders. Enable Use VST3 Plug-In System Folders to activate your VST3 plug-ins. Enable Use VST2 Plug-In Custom Folder and click Browse to select the location of your VST2 Plug-Ins:ħ. Note: If you are using a Live version prior to 10.1., you will find it under Preferences → File/Folder → Plug-In Sources.Ħ. Open Preferences → Plug-Ins → Plug-In Sources Likewise, 64-bit plug-ins won't appear in 32-bit versions of Live.ĥ. Note: Live 10 and 11 are only available in 64-bit, so 32-bit plug-ins aren't supported.
Here are some recommendations for existing folders that you can use:
Depending on the plug-In format, you can either install to a default folder and/or to a custom folder of your choice. Don't install the standalone and VST versions to the same folder.ģ. Some plug-ins may also have a standalone version which is separate from the VST version.
Download the latest installer file from the plug-in manufacturer's website and run it.Ģ.
How to install and activate VST plug-ins on Windowsġ.