[WSG] Standards and Adobe Contribute

2008-11-01 Thread James Farrell
Hi Guys, A client wants to use Adobe Contribute for content management. Is there any point writing standards complient code or will contribute butcher the code anyway? Can I use php at all with contribute? Would love to be able to include html files using php to avoid having to change loads of

RE: [WSG] Standards and Adobe Contribute

2008-11-01 Thread Greenidge, Gerard
Hi James, If you start with a standards compliant dreamweaver template and define the editable regions then Contribute should be able to play nice. Any php code that is NOT part of the editable regions will also be safe. If you are not using dreamweaver then there are additional steps that you

[WSG] I am away on leave [SEC=UNCLASSIFIED]

2008-11-01 Thread nathan.franklin
I am away on leave returning on Monday, 10 November 2008, if you have a request for Customs web admin please send it to [EMAIL PROTECTED] Regards Nathan Nathan Franklin Web Admin | IT Applications | Australian Customs Service Ph: (02) 6275 6357 | http://www.customs.gov.au

[WSG] Re: Standards and Adobe Contribute

2008-11-01 Thread jay
James Further to Gerard's reply - if you would like a sample of a Contribute template working with php, contact me off list jay * From: James Farrell [EMAIL PROTECTED] Date: Sat, 1 Nov 2008 13:53:44 + Subject: Standards

Re: [WSG] Standards and Adobe Contribute

2008-11-01 Thread Joe Ortenzi
Hi James Oddly, someone asked a similar question today in LinkedIn. http://www.linkedin.com/answers/technology/web-development/TCH_WDD/355859-15475515 Contribute is not about content management and you should never let the client specify the technology, that's YOUR job The technology you

Re: [WSG] Standards and Adobe Contribute

2008-11-01 Thread Mark Harris
Joe Ortenzi wrote: Contribute is not about content management as much as it is about allowing an in-house web team to share tasks without a proper CMS deployed. Thus your coder can code and the content writer can write but it can be all wrapped within a team. This is, frankly, Web 1.0, and