laravel-totem
CraftCMS
laravel-totem | CraftCMS | |
---|---|---|
2 | 45 | |
1,732 | 3,162 | |
0.4% | 0.4% | |
3.5 | 10.0 | |
about 1 month ago | 6 days ago | |
PHP | PHP | |
MIT License | proprietary |
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.
laravel-totem
CraftCMS
-
Different flavors of content management
The most typical approach is having a CMS admin panel sit somewhere on the server; everyone with an account uses this. This is a very convenient approach, especially when working with a team. This way, many people can work on different articles simultaneously without worrying about potential conflicts or overwriting stuff. The only con is related to security - everyone can try to get inside, and if you forget to update our CMS or some user have a weak password, it can be someone outside of our team. WordPress, Drupal, CraftCMS, or Ghost are perfect examples of such CMSs.
- Show HN: Primo – a visual CMS with Svelte blocks, a code editor, and SSG
-
Is Htmx Gaining in Popularity?
I checked one website in that list, it uses CraftCMS, which apparently has htmx bundled. (https://github.com/craftcms/cms/tree/main/src/web/assets/htm...)
Would be interesting to know which other CMS'es make use of htmx (and to what degree).
- Site without WordPress
-
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.
-
Stack to build and deploy a fully functional personal blog?
You're basically looking for any CMS that supports headless mode. E.g. Strapi (https://strapi.io/, NodeJS based), CraftCMS (https://craftcms.com/, PHP based) or countless others.
-
SvelteKit+ MongoDB
Craft CMS
- 09
-
A mate of mine built a cool little Tottenham Database showing the history of spurs.
It's built on Craft CMS. Makes the relationships between elements (a match and a player, for example) super easy.
-
Creating a CMS with React, what should I look at?
Is there a reason you aren’t using an existing CMS? There’s a lot that provide all the UI functionality you are talking about and then expose it via a API to be consumed in your front end. https://craftcms.com is one option I’ve had good success with.
What are some alternatives?
platform - Orchid is a @laravel package that allows for rapid application development of back-office applications, admin/user panels, and dashboards.
Wagtail - A Django content management system focused on flexibility and user experience
Symfony Panther - A browser testing and web crawling library for PHP and Symfony
Statamic - The official Statamic Static Site Generator
RubixML - A high-level machine learning and deep learning library for the PHP language.
Pico - Pico is a stupidly simple, blazing fast, flat file CMS.
calendar - 📆 Calendar app for Nextcloud
Backdrop CMS - Backdrop is a full-featured content management system that allows non-technical users to manage a wide variety of content. It can be used to create all kinds of websites including blogs, image galleries, social networks, intranets, and more.
contacts - 📇 Contacts app for Nextcloud
Kirby - Kirby's core application folder
headless-wp-starter - 🔪 WordPress + React Starter Kit: Spin up a WordPress-powered React app in one step
Grav - Modern, Crazy Fast, Ridiculously Easy and Amazingly Powerful Flat-File CMS powered by PHP, Markdown, Twig, and Symfony