| Recommended | World of Warcraft Gold
Quality Link building Is the vital role for any SEO campaign. If you are in search of cheap and thematic links then please visit link-building-service.info for more info. |
|
|
|
TYPO3: Enterprise Content Management: The Official TYPO3 Book, written and endorsed by the core TYPO3 Team |  | Authors: Daniel Hinderink, Rene Fritz, Werner Altmann Publisher: Packt Publishing Category: Book
List Price: $59.99 Buy New: $50.36 as of 7/30/2010 13:23 CDT details You Save: $9.63 (16%)
New (12) Used (8) from $40.95
Seller: Amazon.com Rating: 8 reviews Sales Rank: 1141365
Media: Paperback Pages: 624 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.7 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 7.5 x 1.7
ISBN: 1904811418 Dewey Decimal Number: 005 EAN: 9781904811411 ASIN: 1904811418
Publication Date: July 21, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
| |
| Similar Items:
| |
| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description
The Official TYPO3 Book, written and endorsed by the core TYPO3 Team - Easy-to-use introduction to TYPO3
- Design and build content rich extranets and intranets
- Learn how to manage content and administrate and extend TYPO3
In Detail Because of its complex system and numerous extensions, TYPO3 can be daunting on first approach and the initial learning curve can be steep. However the nature of its advanced features will reward an extra investment in learning. With guidance from TYPO3 experts and core developers your journey into learning and mastering TYPO3 will be a smooth one. While comprehensive and detailed, this book is an easy-to-use introduction to TYPO3. Whether an editor interested in creating and managing content, an administrator who needs to maintain TYPO3 enterprise intranets and extranets, or a developer who needs to extend TYPO3 and integrate it with other systems, this book is all you will need. TYPO3 Free, open source, flexible, and scalable, TYPO3 is one of the most powerful PHP content management systems. It is well suited for creating intranets and extranets for the enterprise. While providing an easy-to-use web interface for non-technical authors and editors of content, it�??s messaging and workflow system allow shared authoring and collaboration. This editor�??s interface is matched by an equally flexible and powerful one for administrators, giving them full control of the system. For editors, the long list of features that TYPO3 offers include WYSIWYG editing; automatic design preservation; automated image processing; Context sensitive menu; wizards for creating tables, bullet lists, mail forms, etc; scheduled publishing; multiple page editing; importing rich text content, such as Word documents, from client application or the web; versioning system; numerous plugs, such as forums, calendars, guestbooks, sitemaps, banner-controls, email-forms, polls, ratings, faqs, glossaries, news, and online shop systems; and Indexed search engine. For administrators, TYPO3 offers user management; permission control; Pageview statistics; Workflow engine; logging; version control system; staging system; raw database access; caching, and many more features. The features that TYPO3 offer developers is equally impressive, including a configuration language; powerful templating system; extension manager and wizard; multi-media integration; publishing static, dynamic and cached content; staged migration, and others. What you will learn from this book? - Install, configure, customize, administrate, and extend TYPO3
- Create, edit, and manage content
- Set up users, permissions, and workflows to ensure that all of your users can contribute to the site quickly and easily
- Create and manage statistics and logs so that you can see how visitors are using your site, and improve it accordingly
- Use standard and create new templates, giving you the power to create a site that looks the way you want it to
- Give your site unique abilities by writing TYPO3 extensions
Approach This book takes a detailed practical approach to using, administrating, and developing TYPO3 websites. There are four major sections each consisting of a number chapters. The first section introduces TYPO3 and covers its basic installation and configuration. Section two shows how editors can create and manage content and assets, prepare content for the appropriate media, and integrate content into appropriate applications, such as a website. In section 3 administrators learn how to maintain, monitor, and control TYPO3 systems. Finally, the book shows developers how to extend the out-of-the-box functionalities of TYPO3. Who this book is written for? This book is aimed at both new and experienced users of TYPO3. Users, administrators, and developers of TYPO3 will all benefit from this comprehensive and authoritative guide.
|
| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 8
A great resource and time saver October 24, 2005 Patrick Gaumond (Québec city, Québec, Canada) 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
Finally, an English book for this powerful CMS. For anyone struggling with the complexity of this system (even if there are more than 5000 pages of free documentation on the website), this book solves the continuity problem. It goes from installation to editors' duties, up to administration and extension development.
What I really appreciate in this book is the logical path it uses to give you the "big picture" of this complex, yet effective system. At the same time, it's also a problem with this book. They want to appeal to everybody (editors' section, development section) and in 575 pages, there's not enough pages to see it all. Sometimes while reading I was thinking "hey they should have talk about this and that"but at the same time realized that a 2000 pages book would had been too costly... Maybe a full 500 pages book on TYPO3 development would do the trick in the future.
Talking about price, you should be aware that part of the profit goes back to the TYPO3 Association and will help the core development of
TYPO3.
What is really great about this book is the Typoscript chapter. It really helps anyone having to do templating and navigation for their TYPO3 websites. I should also mention the Admin chapter as a time saver. You will get tips and tricks on how to setup Back-End Users, Groups and others configurations. It should be noted that it was revised for version 3.8 (May 2005) and so is very up-to-date.
There are about 150 pages devoted to extension development but as I stated, a full book would be welcome just to cover this subject.
Overall I highly recommend this book. When you finish it, you should have learned a great deal about this powerful CMS and feel comfortable enough to dig even more!
Great resource for more advanced users March 11, 2006 G. P. Kamp (New York) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I have used Typo3 for more then 6 months now and it's a love-hate relationship. True, it is a complex system, and it took me quite a while to get up to speed. But once mastered, the sheer number of extensions provide an enormous resource that saves you a lot of time when you develop web-applications. I don't see Typo3 only as a content management system anymore, it is a web-application development platform. And that is where this book kicks in. I agree with other reviewers that the book is not very easy for people who get started with Typo3, but once you reach the stage of developing your own extensions, the book will guide you on that path. For beginning users, I would just recommend the videos on the typo3 website, but anybody who wants to get beyond the basics, this book is a must.
Practical and comprehensive resource June 30, 2006 Semenzato Diego 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This book is a valid resource for who's approaching for the first time TYPO3, but also for those who would like to have a well organised and full detailed manual.
The book covers all the aspects of TYPO3: introduction to the cms functionalities, setting up the cms, content management and administration, template and extensions development. Very useful is the information about the funcionalities provided through installation of third party extensions.
Chapters dedicated to extension development are very well explained with a lot of examples. This is one of the most important "feature" because, before the edition of this book, documents were widespread on the net. Now the concepts are well outlined and easily learned.
There is just one negative point: the book is not based on the latest TYPO3 version (4.0) so a few new topics are not deeply explained and a few others are not explained at all (versioning and workspaces).
At the end, it's very useful book, it makes one save time and a lot of headhache, ideal for everyone who wants to start a new TYPO3 project and also for those who want a practical guide to this fantastic cms.
Just bad June 4, 2006 Guru Mediation 12 out of 12 found this review helpful
A complete waste of $60. The only helpful sections were in the extension programming chapter, which equated to about 12-20 pages of material. I ended up putting the book away and turning back to the online documentation. To make matters worse, the screenshots are now out of date, since Typo3 4.0 uses a different backend skiin than 3.8.
My recommendation, stay away, use the documentation at typo3.org instead.
Typo3: Enterprise Content Management February 4, 2006 J. Frasier 7 out of 7 found this review helpful
I work daily with Typo3, managing 3 sites utilizing it, and always working with new extensions etc.etc.
I purchased this book to help answer alot of questions in the daily management of Typo3, and found it very....very....disappointing. It had very little useful information (such as how to direct domains to subfolders, 0 information on the most common extensions, informative instruction in the use of those extensions, etc.) I am not very interested in the history of the programmers, although some information is good, you can always go to the site for more.
In todays development world, books have to interact with a associated website. A great example would be "More on CSS by Eric Myer".
So all in all, don't waste your $60 dollars, just find a friend that knows it and have him do a sit down.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 8
|
|
|
Copyright © 2009 Information Literacy and Business Web Content
| |