Kirby
Textpattern
Our great sponsors
Kirby | Textpattern | |
---|---|---|
56 | 15 | |
1,196 | 760 | |
3.0% | 1.4% | |
9.9 | 9.4 | |
1 day ago | 17 days ago | |
PHP | PHP | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Kirby
-
Show HN: Primo – a visual CMS with Svelte blocks, a code editor, and SSG
Not sure if this is what you’re after but give https://getkirby.com/ a try
- Kirby: Simple Flat-File CMS
-
Grav is a modern open-source flat-file CMS
Personally think https://getkirby.com is the entry to beat but I guess it’s just because I’m used to it and it works incredibly well for my use case.
-
What kind of CMS for custom website?
Check out KirbyCMS. A PHP based files-only CMS. Can also be used as headless CMS. Works on most shared hosts and doesn't need a database. You'll have to do some basic PHP for the templates, though.
- What technology do you use to build websites these days?
-
WP20 and Audrey Scholars – Matt Mullenweg
I guess it depends what you need to build. I used to use Wordpress for all my personal and client projects but I then moved to Kirby[0] and I couldn’t be happier.
But I think it highly depends on what kind of projects you work on.
[0] https://getkirby.com/
-
Ask HN: How do I make a website in 2023?
I can recommend Kirby (https://getkirby.com/), a flat file PHP CMS. It’s fast, has a panel to update data and can be hosted on any basically any PHP host. Just use the quite simple PHP-templates and add CSS & JS like you already know how to do. No need to complicate things.
-
Go with PHP
PHP has a lot of top tier CMSes. IMHO bunch of them are even better than Statamic. Craft CMS (https://craftcms.com/) is a lot more mature database based CMS. Kirby (https://getkirby.com/) is better at flat-file and has a lot better admin interface. Twill (https://twillcms.com/) is better integrated in Laravel and is fully open-source. Statamic mostly feels like it's sitting besides Laravel and they call themselves Laravel based for marketing.
- Feedback call for Tailkits ✨
- Headless CMS with the best documentation for vue/nuxt.js
Textpattern
-
Revisiting Textpattern
>What's with the insistence of running it off of just MySQL?
I think the most honest answer here is that it's planned but not scheduled. There's an open issue to update Textpattern to PDO:
https://github.com/textpattern/textpattern/issues/345
…which will open up a whole new world of possibilities.
The Textpattern dev team & user base is pretty small, and the user base is largely patient, so Textpattern can sometimes fall into a trap of being 'good enough for now' and go for extended periods of time with few commits. What tends to happen is a release is scheduled, takes place, and then the plans for the next release are more forefront in our minds. The most recent release was nearly two years ago, which is a long time in Textpattern terms, but I'm confident we can get Textpattern 4.9 into the release pipeline this winter. More on that here:
https://github.com/textpattern/textpattern/issues/1879
-
Style Your RSS Feed
https://github.com/textpattern/textpattern/releases.atom
- Craft CMS 4 Released
-
Ask HN: For static HTML, what is your go to template?
Depends on the need...I have a quick LibreOffice HTML template in light or dark. I include metas for mobile use in the document properties. I also have a PHP controller that can easily modify these if I need it to be more dynamic.
Otherwise I use https://picocss.com/ for some things.
For publishing I either drop the HTML file in a folder with or without a controller, or start a new endpoint by creating a new section in TXP [1] and drop in whatever HTML and txp xml tags I need there.
1. https://textpattern.com/
- Textpattern CMS – open-source content management system
-
Textile Markup Language
Textile was the driving markup behind Textpattern (https://textpattern.com/), one of the better publishing/CMS tools out there on PHP. It had a nice object oriented approach that was less painful than Wordpress, and gave great flexibility to design aspects in ways that were easier to work with than Wordpress... but Wordpress won the popular marketshare, and TP was relegated to some diehards. Those diehards still pump out fixes and features, and it's worth a look at https://github.com/textpattern/textpattern/ if you want to see something a bit different.
-
Textpattern CMS
>It bills itself as a "Content Management System", which I've always thought was an amorphous term. I suppose you could use it for a blog, wiki, or something similar.
Textpattern person here. It's readily usable as a blog, corporate site, etc. A wiki would be less straightforward, especially if you have multiple users doing stuff, since we don't have any revision history built into the core software.
Textpattern 4.0.0 (the first production version) was released in 2005, and we're currently working on Textpattern 4.8.8 for release in Q4 this year after PHP 8.1 lands at the end of November.
The 4.9 release series is also being worked on, we'll probably see the first cut from that branch in 2022.
Some links:
* https://github.com/textpattern/textpattern (core software)
* https://forum.textpattern.com/ (community forum)
* https://docs.textpattern.com (docs)
* https://textpattern.co/demo (demo landing page)
* https://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvekey.cgi?keyword=textpattern (CVEs on mitre.org)
- Static site generators to watch in 2021
-
WordPress is 18
Wordpress made a great impact on the net, and I was happy when clients liked its ease of use and relieved from the burden of making content changes. (Though, I've always felt that https://textpattern.com/ was more secure and better than Wordpress).
-
Any good math blogging platforms?
Consider Textpattern.
What are some alternatives?
Grav - Modern, Crazy Fast, Ridiculously Easy and Amazingly Powerful Flat-File CMS powered by PHP, Markdown, Twig, and Symfony
Attendize - Attendize is an open-source ticket selling and event management platform built on Laravel.
WordPress - WordPress, Git-ified. This repository is just a mirror of the WordPress subversion repository. Please do not send pull requests. Submit pull requests to https://github.com/WordPress/wordpress-develop and patches to https://core.trac.wordpress.org/ instead.
ProcessWire - ProcessWire 3.x is a friendly and powerful open source CMS with a strong API.
Next.js - The React Framework
tinacms - A fully open-source headless CMS that supports Markdown and Visual Editing
wp2static - WordPress static site generator for security, performance and cost benefits
Bludit - Simple, Fast, Secure, Flat-File CMS
firecms - Awesome Firebase/Firestore-based CMS. The missing admin panel for your Firebase project!
Bolt - Bolt is a simple CMS written in PHP. It is based on Silex and Symfony components, uses Twig and either SQLite, MySQL or PostgreSQL.