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kot-airplane2017-09-12 22:34:58
CMS
kot-airplane, 2017-09-12 22:34:58

Who wrote their CMS?

We can ask you a few questions:
1) What system inspired or modeled?
2) Did you write an installer for it or was there another installation method?
3) What kind of visual editor did you use for the admin panel? One of the 2 known, something else, or your own?
4) Did she have any specialization - shops, business cards, landing pages, something else?
5) Were the core and additional modules separated?
6) Was there some kind of template system? (did you use a template engine or php)?
Well, if there are links to the repositories, throw it to someone who is not ashamed to show if you have it in the public domain.

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3 answer(s)
A
Alexey Epsilon, 2017-09-21
@kot-airplane

Yes, I wrote in PHP. The main idea was modularity and automatic tracking of changes.
1) What system was inspired or taken as a model?
None, considered all other CMS "under-systems", unworthy of imitation.
2) Did you write an installer for it or was there another installation method?
No, it was supposed to be a PHP script that starts working immediately after installation.
3) What visual editor did you use for the admin panel? One of the 2 known, something else, or your own?
At first I wanted to write my own, then I realized that I would not write a competitive one for the rest of my life and used TinyMCE.
4) Did she have any specialization - shops, business cards, landing pages, something else?
No, modularity meant complete universality.
5) Were the core and additional modules separated?
Yes, the kernel was small, all the functionality was (supposed) in modules.
6) Was there some kind of template system? (did you use a template engine or php)?
Yes, plain-php or smarty templating could be used as a templating engine for pages.
- Well, if there are links to the repositories, throw it to someone who is not ashamed to show if you have it in the public domain.
There are no such links. In fact, a rather large product - my own CMS (which I have been making for 4 years) was corny flushed down the toilet, and 8 sites made on its basis were converted to another popular CMS and nothing was lost from it, but even gained.
After the fact, it turned out that the desire to develop "your own CMS" was caused by the unwillingness to deal with the already existing popular general-purpose CMS, as well as the feeling of being "the navel of the earth", smarter than hundreds and thousands of other people.
You just had to look at the existing CMS and use one of them. Sorry for the wasted years.

A
Anton Tikhomirov, 2017-09-21
@Acuna

A couple of years ago I answered a completely similar question, sketched out entire memoirs, from now on I just copy the link to it, because it more than covers all the points: Php cms for self-taught is real?

M
marsdenden, 2017-09-22
@marsdenden

Look at MaxSiteCMS.
Max is some kind of Russophobe, but he built a high-speed system. There is a repository on the github, everything is open, there is some community, an ideal system for blogs, but for two years now I have been sawing it not at all for blog topics.
Having dealt with this system (not so difficult), you can fork your branch, although I don’t see the point - development is underway, there is support, screwing your own is not a problem at all, the system works on Codeigniter 2.x, I actively use jQuery, the lodash template engine - it turns out some your framework inside the CMS. The concept of plugins separates the core from everything attached, templates can also be changed. I implement all my bells and whistles exactly as a plugin + template.
For layout there is its own UniCSS, SASS compiler (I used LESS before)

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