I'd love to see them. The new TG site is using tgext.pages, but multiple CMSes is a very good thing, especially when they're good.
I'm pretty sure the ACR CMS people still hang out on this list. I hope they'll accept your help/input. On Tue, Mar 29, 2011 at 8:53 AM, alex bodnaru <[email protected]>wrote: > > hello friends, > > after an effort to enhance tgext.pages, i'd like to invest the experience > i've > gained into acr cms, which is more professionally designed, and yet it has > to be > improved. > > after trying the demo there are a few comments: > > acr-0.2.2 sthould depend on stroller and on SQLAlchemy >= 0.6.6; > the preloaded example should contain some slices for the main section too. > a section should have a border and a top bar in edit mode, like slices, and > a > button to allow adding a slice to the section. > i've made tw.tinymce3 and it's in bitbucket. soon in pypi. > the special slices editable in acr should also be embeddable in html > slices, > definitely through selection lists available in tw.tinymce api. a working > example in tgext.pages. > deleting a page should delete it's slices, after special confirmation, of > course. > in page edit form, only the page itself should be selectable. a tree > control > might improve readability, at least a selection box with optgroups, or, > last of > the least, joining a page's name with it's ancestors. > page names should be unique only within their parents, so that > /home/alex/hobbies could coexist with /home/mark/hobbies. > > i'd be willing to help. > > what would you think of these? > alex > > -- > You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups > "TurboGears" group. > To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. > To unsubscribe from this group, send email to > [email protected]. > For more options, visit this group at > http://groups.google.com/group/turbogears?hl=en. > > -- Michael J. Pedersen My IM IDs: Jabber/[email protected], ICQ/103345809, AIM/pedermj022171 Yahoo/pedermj2002, MSN/[email protected] ---------- All humans fail, in both great and small ways we fail continually. Machines fail too. Computers are machines that are managed by humans, the fallout from failure can be spectacular. Your responsibility is to deal with failure, to anticipate it and to eliminate it as far as is humanly and economically wise to achieve. Are your actions part of the problem or part of the solution? -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "TurboGears" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected]. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/turbogears?hl=en.

