Difference between revisions of "VLW"

From vlwcms Wiki
(Stone Soup)
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===Stone Soup===
 
===Stone Soup===
 
One of the wonderful things about the Open Source movement is the rich array of toolkits, code snippets, and projects that are available for integrating into new tools. VLW is very much a work of stone soup, built around the popular WYSIWYG (what you see is what you get) web page editor, fckeditor. It also uses SWCP's mail-form-results script to deliver form data to you via email.
 
One of the wonderful things about the Open Source movement is the rich array of toolkits, code snippets, and projects that are available for integrating into new tools. VLW is very much a work of stone soup, built around the popular WYSIWYG (what you see is what you get) web page editor, fckeditor. It also uses SWCP's mail-form-results script to deliver form data to you via email.
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===Layout===
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The layout for a VLW site is very basic. Top area contains a sitename, and place for a logo. Neither are mandatory.
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The neck is a horizontal navigation bar. You can add items to it or not as you'd like. The main body consists of a side navigation bar (either on the left or right depending on the template choosen), and a main contents area. The side navigation area will be reserved, but you don't have to put any links in it if you don't want to. At the bottom of the page you'll find the footer area, usually used for contact info, copyright notices, or site taglines.
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The easiest way to move around your website is to define pages and place them in the top or side navigation bars. When you define a page you simply check top, side, both or neither to place them in the navigation areas.

Revision as of 11:16, 27 August 2009

Does the World really need another CMS?

VLW was created for a very specific function. To be an easy to use starter website tool. There are lots of full featured content management systems out there for doing every thing from blogging to social networking, but they are complex and require a steep learning curve and often expose underlying HTML or CSS issues making the learning curve even steeper. VLW was designed for small websites needing a few article pages, wanting a consistant look and feel from page to page and/or some simple pages to collect data from a customer and mail it to the website owner.

Stone Soup

One of the wonderful things about the Open Source movement is the rich array of toolkits, code snippets, and projects that are available for integrating into new tools. VLW is very much a work of stone soup, built around the popular WYSIWYG (what you see is what you get) web page editor, fckeditor. It also uses SWCP's mail-form-results script to deliver form data to you via email.

Layout

The layout for a VLW site is very basic. Top area contains a sitename, and place for a logo. Neither are mandatory. The neck is a horizontal navigation bar. You can add items to it or not as you'd like. The main body consists of a side navigation bar (either on the left or right depending on the template choosen), and a main contents area. The side navigation area will be reserved, but you don't have to put any links in it if you don't want to. At the bottom of the page you'll find the footer area, usually used for contact info, copyright notices, or site taglines.

The easiest way to move around your website is to define pages and place them in the top or side navigation bars. When you define a page you simply check top, side, both or neither to place them in the navigation areas.