Ardie! How's it going bro? Hehehe I can see a very long [OT] thread
following this. Naukay pa man jud. Matt! explain yourself! este defend
yourself (again). :)

Regards to everyone on the list.

Jon

Raymond Olavides wrote:
> 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]
> <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>> wrote:
> 
>     wow. nice one. raymond your da man...
>      
> 
>      
>     On 3/14/07, *Raymond Olavides* < [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>     <mailto:[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
>         <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 <http://audienceone.blogspot.com/>
>         _________________________________________________
>         Kagay-Anon Linux Users' Group (KLUG) Mailing List
>         [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
>         (http://cdo.linux.org.ph <http://cdo.linux.org.ph/>)
>         Searchable Archives: http://archives.free.net.ph
>         <http://archives.free.net.ph/>
> 
> 
> 
> 
>     -- 
>     How many people can read hex if only you and dead people can read hex?
>     - http://www.tildemark.com/ <http://www.tildemark.com/>
> 
>     _________________________________________________
>     Kagay-Anon Linux Users' Group (KLUG) Mailing List
>     [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
>     (http://cdo.linux.org.ph)
>     Searchable Archives: http://archives.free.net.ph
> 
> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> 
> http://audienceone.blogspot.com
> 
> 
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> 
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