On Wednesday 20 January 2010 10:29:38 pm Hendry wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Thanks for both Robert and Allen for sharing, I agree, Drupal is very
> easy to start with, and it is also very powerful, but somehow, I find
> it very hard to extend which is might be due to my lack of experience.
>
> # Hendry
The
On 1/21/2010 7:58 AM, Paul M Foster wrote:
On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 11:29:54AM +0800, Hendry wrote:
Hi,
Anyone can share your favorite PHP open source CMS to work with and
what's the reason? I'm looking for something that easily extensible.
I've googled and found severals but I'm still confus
tedd wrote:
At 11:29 AM +0800 1/21/10, Hendry wrote:
Hi,
Anyone can share your favorite PHP open source CMS to work with and
what's the reason? I'm looking for something that easily extensible.
I've googled and found severals but I'm still confused, some from the
lists:
- Drupal
- Tomato CMS
-
At 11:29 AM +0800 1/21/10, Hendry wrote:
Hi,
Anyone can share your favorite PHP open source CMS to work with and
what's the reason? I'm looking for something that easily extensible.
I've googled and found severals but I'm still confused, some from the
lists:
- Drupal
- Tomato CMS
- modx
- xoops
Hendry wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Anyone can share your favorite PHP open source CMS to work with and
> what's the reason? I'm looking for something that easily extensible.
I have just installed websitebaker for a client. I've also got redaxo
installed for another client.
/Per
--
Per Jessen, Zürich
Hendry wrote:
Hi,
Anyone can share your favorite PHP open source CMS to work with and
what's the reason? I'm looking for something that easily extensible.
I've googled and found severals but I'm still confused, some from the
Bitweaver is nice and modular, load what you want to use, wiki, artic
On Wed, Jan 20, 2010 at 08:15:55PM -0800, Allen McCabe wrote:
> For a work in progress, view http://www.mwclans.com/new_index.php
>
> The login fields are a 'component' I include in the header.
> The links are generated from the 'links' table; the primary_navigation links
> are a class by the sam
On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 11:29:54AM +0800, Hendry wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Anyone can share your favorite PHP open source CMS to work with and
> what's the reason? I'm looking for something that easily extensible.
> I've googled and found severals but I'm still confused, some from the
> lists:
> - Drupal
Hi,
Thanks for both Robert and Allen for sharing, I agree, Drupal is very
easy to start with, and it is also very powerful, but somehow, I find
it very hard to extend which is might be due to my lack of experience.
# Hendry
On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 12:21 PM, Allen McCabe wrote:
> I suppose I am
I suppose I am opposed to 'custom systems' with PHP. I feel that you
shouldn't have to learn "new-stuff" that is specific to a certain system if
it is so extensive. I know, I'm lazy, but I've been trying to learn PHP (as
well as needing to learn JavaScript, SQL, and CSS 2.0 lately) and not stuff
th
For a work in progress, view http://www.mwclans.com/new_index.php
The login fields are a 'component' I include in the header.
The links are generated from the 'links' table; the primary_navigation links
are a class by the same name, and the 'footer_navigation' are also a
different category. All li
Allen McCabe wrote:
I've not had much experience with CMS's, however Drupal seems pretty
featured, with the steep-learning curve; it's not very user friendly.
Not to disregard your own experience, but I've found Drupal surprisingly
easy to get running with. In fact it's pretty much my first ch
I've not had much experience with CMS's, however Drupal seems pretty
featured, with the steep-learning curve; it's not very user friendly.
I'm working on my own CMS which is more generic, so that it can be used with
any kind of website (basically). I suggest you do the same; have a page
class with
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