Nakakita man gud ug Joomla nga topic. :D hehe

Ang mga thuh mayne dinhi nga list kay kanang Baluyos brothers.

http://pinoyslang.com/?q=nagbabaluyos

;)

On 3/14/07, tildemark <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

wow. nice one. raymond your da man...



On 3/14/07, Raymond Olavides <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Sections/Categories are hierarchial in nature. A sort of single point of
> entry to access the data - synonymous to directories in a file system. For
> contents, the relationship is belongsTo and is dependent (dropped/deleted on
> parent delete). For folders (sections/categories) the relationship is
> hasMany content, no depedency, and cascade drop/delete contents.
>
> Drupal's implementation of sections/categories is closer to tags or
> tagging (if it's not tags.) Tags? What are tags? for the uninitiated, here's
> a copy and pasted definition (google define:tags)
>
> labels added to ACSII text to add value to the text: searchability,
> display formatting, hypertext links, scholarly notes, and preservation
> information, for example.
>
>
> So, they are labels. Labels and tags are loosely defined and often times
> relative to the person giving a particular article/content a tag. For
> contents and tags, the relationship is always hasMany and belongsToMany but
> has no dependency. Allowing contents to belong to multiple relative
> categories.
>
> Tags is one of the search engine optimizer's bestfriend.
>
> And back to Joomla! ;) Joomla! does have a component to let its
> users/administrator set the contents to belong to several tags. IMO, if one
> is building a site which contains articles that belongs to a specific
> genre/section/category/column - Joomla! would be the best choice. If one is
> to build a site with contents loosely categorized, I'd still go with Joomla!
> since the feature is supported as a free 3rd party add-on plus strict
> categorization will be available in the future if the company decides to
> "organize".
>
> Joomla! also has a 3rd party component to support multiple site in one
> installation.
>
> As to blogging capability, the popular wordpress blog system wordpress
> has a bridge and integration module/component Joomla! With that, you can
> separate organizational contents from people's personal editorials and
> column. And for collaborative content writing, the popular mediawiki used by
> wikipedia can also be integrated into Joomla!.
>
> If one needs extra functionality, one can invest more time in Joomla!
> and learn how to develop one's own component to fill the need - much like
> what one would do with drupal if the functionality doesn't exists.
>
> Since I've touched on developing components and you might not have the
> time to learn the internals of Joomla! but you've invested time in learning
> CakePHP - A Rapid Application Development framework similar to Ruby on
> Rails, then I have good news. CakePHP developed applications can run
> side-by-side and inside Joomla!
>
> Those who have not tried using Joomla! try it out and visit the Filipino
> Community at http://joomla.org.ph our friends there will be glad to help
> you out with your questions.
>
> For Joomla! and CakePHP or PHP development consultancy, please contact
> ... hahaha!
>
> Seriously, Joomla! is flexible, and extendable. The API documentation
> will help you a lot.
>
>
> > * what i meant was you could not set an article to have/belong to many
> > sections or categories.
> > * what i meant on community site is that it could support multiple cms
> > instance on single install.
> >
>
>
>
>
> --
>
> http://audienceone.blogspot.com
> _________________________________________________
> Kagay-Anon Linux Users' Group (KLUG) Mailing List
> [email protected] (http://cdo.linux.org.ph)
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>



--
How many people can read hex if only you and dead people can read hex?
- http://www.tildemark.com/

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--

http://audienceone.blogspot.com
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