A web content management system (WCMS) is a software system which provides website authoring and administration tools designed to allow users with little knowledge of web programming languages or markup languages to create and manage the site's 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.[1][2]
A presentation layer displays the content to Web-site visitors based on a set of templates. The templates are sometimes XSLT files.[3]
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.[4]
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.[5]
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A WCMS is a software system used to control a dynamic collection of Web material (HTML documents, images and other forms of media).[6] A CMS facilitates document control, auditing, editing, and timeline management. A WCMS typically has[7][8]:
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.
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.
Some systems combine the offline and online approaches. Some systems write out executable code (e.g. JSP, ASP, PHP, ColdFusion, or Perl pages) 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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