This is not the same as before. Anyway, I am not sure myself this is a good 
idea but, in principle there is no need to make the entire page editable. 
The editable part can be restricted to one div in the page (perhaps more 
than one div eventually). In that case it will be possible to swap themes 
as long as they have compatible divs (same ids).


On Monday, 23 April 2012 13:29:25 UTC-5, Ross Peoples wrote:
>
> I remember seeing this once before. This is great if you find a theme you 
> like online and want to make a prototype of your site in that theme and 
> this is a very cool tool in general. The question is, do we really want to 
> go in this direction for a CMS? The content is basically imprisoned in 
> hard-coded HTML, making theme changes difficult at best. I could see making 
> static HTML pages for sites with this (i.e. like Dreamwaver), but for a 
> CMS, I'm not sure.
>
> On Monday, April 23, 2012 2:07:27 PM UTC-4, Massimo Di Pierro wrote:
>>
>> P.S. You have to register else there are copyright issues. This is a 
>> complete rewrite of a previous experiment with the same name.
>>
>> On Monday, 23 April 2012 12:46:13 UTC-5, Massimo Di Pierro wrote:
>>>
>>> Here is a just a piece of the puzzle for you to try:
>>>
>>>    http://tests.web2py.com/plasmid/
>>>
>>> It may be useful to build web2py layouts or CMS themes. Or it could be 
>>> useful to edit the pages themselves.
>>> Nothing prevents from inserting @{...} tags that embed web2py 
>>> (plugin_wiki?) components.
>>>
>>> My server is slow so be patient and try not to kill it or I will have to 
>>> take the app down.
>>>
>>> massimo
>>>
>>

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