Introduction to CMS
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All webpages are created equal, and are made with some combination of HTML, CSS and JavaScript. When webpages were first created, there was an actual, literal .htm(l) file for each webpage. If one had a site with 10 pages, there were 10 files; a website with 10,000 pages would (in theory) have had 10,000 files! As websites evolved, and these files needed to be maintained, it became clear that some method to manage the information on those pages in an efficient manner would be necessary.
What is a CMS?
- CMS stands for Content Management System(s).
- A CMS is a computer program (like Word) for managing a website.
- But it runs on [top of] server software - it's not installed locally (like Word).
- One uses a web browser to interact with a CMS, rather than directly (like Word).
- CMS typically store content in a database. This can be analogous to the brain-and-body; the database is the brain, and the files are the body. Think Frankensite. :)
- CMS often have a templating (or theme, skin, etc) system, for abstracting content and design. By simply changing a template, it can be like a new outfit or a coat of paint; an all-new-looking website, with the same, exact content.
- CMS are complex software programs, built using multiple programming languages, such as;
- PHP or .NET
- SQL
- XML
- HTML
- CSS
- JavaScript & JSON
- Generates each page dynamically (on-the-fly), and when CMS finish operating, what is output, is typically HTML, CSS and JS.