Web Content
Management System
A Web Content Management System (WCM, WCMS or Web CMS) is content
management system (CMS) software, implemented as a Web application, for
creating and managing HTML content. It is used to manage and control a large,
dynamic collection of Web material (HTML documents and their associated
images). A WCMS facilitates content creation, content control, editing, and
essential Web maintenance functions.
The software provides authoring (and other) tools designed
to allow users with little knowledge of programming languages or markup
languages to create and manage content with relative ease.
Most systems use a database to store content, metadata, or
artifacts that might be needed by the system. Content is frequently, but not universally,
stored as XML, to facilitate reuse and enable flexible presentation options.
A presentation layer displays the content to Web-site
visitors based on a set of templates. The templates are sometimes XSLT files.
Most systems use server side caching boosting performance.
This works best when the WCMS is not changed often but visits happen on a
regular basis.
Administration is typically done through browser-based
interfaces, but some systems require the use of a fat client.
Unlike Web-site builders, a WCMS allows non-technical users
to make changes to a website with little training. A WCMS typically requires an
experienced coder to set up and add features, but is primarily a Web-site
maintenance tool for non-technical administrators.
Capabilities
A WCMS is a software system used to manage and control a
dynamic collection of Web material (HTML documents, images and other forms of
media).[5] A CMS facilitates document control, auditing, editing, and timeline
management. A WCMS typically has:
Automated templates
Create standard output templates
(usually HTML and XML) that can be automatically applied to new and existing
content, allowing the appearance of all content to be changed from one central
place.
Easily editable content
Once content is separated from the
visual presentation of a site, it usually becomes much easier and quicker to
edit and manipulate. Most WCMS software includes WYSIWYG editing tools allowing
non-technical individuals to create and edit content.
Scalable feature sets
Most WCMS software includes plug-ins or
modules that can be easily installed to extend an existing site's
functionality.
Web standards upgrades
Active WCMS software usually receives
regular updates that include new feature sets and keep the system up to current
web standards.
Workflow management
Workflow is the process of creating
cycles of sequential and parallel tasks that must be accomplished in the CMS.
For example, a content creator can submit a story, but it is not published
until the copy editor cleans it up and the editor-in-chief approves it.
Delegation
Some CMS software allows for various
user groups to have limited privileges over specific content on the website,
spreading out the responsibility of content management.
Document management
CMS software may provide a means of
managing the life cycle of a document from initial creation time, through
revisions, publication, archive, and document destruction.
Content virtualization
CMS software may provide a means of
allowing each user to work within a virtual copy of the entire Web site,
document set, and/or code base. This enables changes to multiple interdependent
resources to be viewed and/or executed in-context prior to submission.
Types
Types
There are three major types of WCMS: offline processing,
online processing, and hybrid systems. These terms describe the deployment
pattern for the WCMS in terms of when presentation templates are applied to
render Web pages from structured content.
Online processing (called "frying" systems) these
systems apply templates on-demand. HTML may be generated when a user visits the
page, or pulled from a cache.
Most open source WCMSs have the capability to support
add-ons, which provide extended capabilities including forums, blog, wiki,
web-stores, photo-galleries, contact-management, etc. These are often called
modules, nodes, widgets, add-ons or extensions. Add-ons may be based on an
open-source or paid license model.
Different WCMSs have significantly different feature-sets
and target audiences.
Hybrid Systems
Some systems combine the offline and online approaches.
Some systems write out executable code rather than just static HTML, so that
the CMS itself does not need to be deployed on every Web server. Other hybrids
operate in either an online or offline mode.
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