5/23/2023 0 Comments Tinymce jotspot![]() This allows for building wiki applications and constitutes the TWiki's notion of a structured wiki. ![]() ![]() A formatted search with a SQL-like query can be embedded into a page to construct dynamic presentation of data from multiple pages. A set of pages that share the same type of form build a database table. A TWiki Form is attached to a page as meta data. TWiki has database features built into the engine. Load balancing and caching can be used to improve performance on high traffic sites. Many corporate TWiki installations have several hundred thousand pages and tens of thousands of users. TWiki scales reasonably well even though it uses plain text files and no relational database to store page data. RCS is optional since an all-Perl version control system is provided. Everything, including meta such as access control settings, are version controlled using RCS. Wiki pages are stored in plain text files. TWiki customers include Fortune 500 such as Nokia, Motorola and Yahoo!, as well as small and medium enterprises, such as ARM and DHL. The TWiki community estimates 40,000 corporate wiki sites as of March 2007, and 20,000 public TWiki sites. TWiki is primarily used at the workplace as a corporate wiki to coordinate team activities, track projects, implement workflows and as an Intranet Wiki. It includes support for internationalization (' I18N'), with support for multiple character sets, UTF-8 URLs, and the user interface has been translated into Bulgarian, Chinese, Czech, Danish, Dutch, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish and Swedish. The interface of TWiki is completely skinnable in templates, themes and (per user) CSS. Users have built TWiki applications that include call center status boards, to-do lists, inventory systems, employee handbooks, bug trackers, blog applications, discussion forums, status reports with rollups and more. Wiki applications are also called situational applications because they are created ad-hoc by the users for very specific needs. TWiki as a structured wiki provides database-like manipulation of fields stored on pages, and offers a SQL-like query language to embed reports in wiki pages. TWiki has a plugin API that has spawned over 400 extensions to link into databases, create charts, tags, sort tables, write spreadsheets, create image gallery and slideshows, make drawings, write blogs, plot graphs, interface to many different authentication schemes, track Extreme Programming projects and so on. RSS/ Atom feeds and e-mail notification.Built in database - users can create wiki applications using the TWiki Markup Language.Forms and reporting - capture structured content, report on it with searches embedded in pages.Dynamic content generation with TWiki variables.Fine-grained access control - restrict read/write/rename on site level, web level, page level based on user groups.Revision control - complete audit trail, also for meta data such as attachments and access control settings.
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