Well if the OP has the link to it in the first place then yes that would work.
On Mon, Mar 19, 2012 at 11:21 AM, Ross McKay wrote:
> On Sun, 18 Mar 2012 23:20:21 +0100, Alain Roger wrote:
>
>>i have a customer who need to update his website but he was not able to
>>tell me more about it.
>>he
On Sun, 18 Mar 2012 23:20:21 +0100, Alain Roger wrote:
>i have a customer who need to update his website but he was not able to
>tell me more about it.
>he just told me it's a CMS and sent me a screenshot.
>[...]
Instead of hoping for a USENET reader to recognise that screenshot, open
the login p
CMS is Customer Management System. It allows anyone with no programming
skills to create and update a content-driven website.
There are lots of free CMSs available for download (just search for CMS on
google).
As for the requirements, nothing fancy is required, any modern day hosting
will allo
I use wordpress, easy, clean, and lots of plugins.
Joomla is also good.
--
itoctopus - http://www.itoctopus.com
""Joey"" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Does anyone know of any good open source CMS system? ( content management
> system )
>
>
>
> Thanks!
>
>
> Joey
>
Hey!
@Barry, Thanks for the info.
To answer your Q: nope, never coded a CMS but have a
rough (very rough) idea on how it works, I have been
coding for years from C->Java->PHP
> Top3 is a very big Hammer when you start from
> scratch.
Thats what i wanted to know...
@Nick T, Thanks for the huge a
Ryan A schrieb:
How hard was it for you to learn it?
It's like a new language...
How useful has it been to you?
Very. Depends on what you. When you get into meodul coding you are very
near to a extremly useable CMS system.
Support when you hit a programming wall?
The community is quite help
in infinite wisdom Gregory Machin spoke thus On 11/23/2005 04:28 PM:
> Sorry for the lack of clarity on the single page... eg :
> http://127.0.0.1/index.php?
> where the index.php holds the logic of what is displayed and by passing vars
> back to it's self determins what is next displayed .. hope
in infinite wisdom Gregory Machin spoke thus On 11/23/2005 04:28 PM:
> Sorry for the lack of clarity on the single page... eg :
> http://127.0.0.1/index.php?
> where the index.php holds the logic of what is displayed and by passing vars
> back to it's self determins what is next displayed .. hope
in infinite wisdom Gregory Machin spoke thus On 11/23/2005 04:28 PM:
> Sorry for the lack of clarity on the single page... eg :
> http://127.0.0.1/index.php?
> where the index.php holds the logic of what is displayed and by passing vars
> back to it's self determins what is next displayed .. hope
Adam,
The question you ask is an important one. Is there a CMS out there that
meets your client's needs that you don't have to write from scratch? In
short, the answer is "no." I've sifted through mounds and mounds of
CMSes, and I haven't found one that I really like. It's really up to
you
Lauri Vain wrote:
> Hello there,
Hello
>
> I'm seriously researching some aspects of writing a content management
> system that would be 'relatively' easy to extend.
>
> My biggest problem is the ground level -- how should the central system
> (that registers modules) work? Ideally, it shoul
Hi!
I have tried to make a complete modular php cms system. The hardest part
was not selecting which modules to load, but their presentation. I don't
know if what I did was good enough, i.e: the best implementatin, but
somewhat was working.
What I did was basically query a Mysql table, sel
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