Joomla 3.2 shows "Recently Added Articles" (last 5) at the Admin panel dashboard.
I want to show those recently added article from any category on front site as module.
Like:
Rencent added articles:
article 5
article 4
article 3
article 2
article 1
Is there any option to do so?
Thanks
You just need to create a new Module in the Module Manager. Use the default Latest Articles module that ships with Joomla 3.2. In the settings you can select the module position you want it to display in your template, what categories to pull articles from, how many articles to show, what pages to display the module on and many other options.
Related
I have a wagtail project being developed, essentially a blog with a forum. I chose django-machina as the forum I want to use because of how modular it is and how well it integrates into existing projects.
I followed the instructions in the documentation without issue, and the install was a success. I can access the app by going to /forum on my project.
However, the next step in the documentation refers to using the forum admin panel. My wagtail admin menu does not have a section for forum and I can't access the django admin panel as it is a wagtail project.
Where exactly can I access the django-machina forum admin panel in a wagtail project? Or would I have to recreate it somehow?
Jake, it's not so difficult. Let your project be named 'my_project'. So than we should go to my_project/my_project/urls.py. There we see something like this:
url(r'^django-admin/', admin.site.urls),
And what this string say to us? It show how to get the vanilla django-admin! Ok, now just go to your.site/django-admin and run your forum! ;)
Unless the documentation specifically mentions Wagtail, it's more likely that the admin panel shows up in the Django admin backend rather than the Wagtail one. On a standard Wagtail project this is found at the URL /django-admin/, but it depends on what you have specified in your project's urls.py file.
I have installed WeBlog module in Sitecore. I have created sample blog, entry, category. Now i want to do 2 things.
Display latest blog in list format just like this
On right side category is displaying, now I want to display corresponding blog on click of category.
Essentially you have to create something custom using the tools WeBlog gives you - no different from Sitecore
There is a great video online showing you how to create a blog listing with WeBlog and I believe it covers displaying Categories and even Tag Clouds.
https://youtu.be/DGlyYP4PK28?t=15m17s
Definitely worth a watch as it'll give you want you require, however there doesn't seem to be any source code provided for the example he makes. However you'll know how to develop it from watching the video
we are trying to migrate a project written with Drupal to Django CMS and we faced a problem with article module. Our site is divided in sections and we have a news module installed in every section with a category, url structure is looking like this:
/section1
/news-category1
/section2
/news-category2
/etc..
This is the same news module, just split in categories (some news articles can pop up in multiple sections, in this case one section is chosen as base to form unique article URL). The only one method I found makes this structure:
/news
/caregory1
/category2
/etc...
Which is not good for us as we would prefer to keep the current URL structure for SEO purposes. Is there a correct way to implement this in Django CMS beside creating each section as a module and plugging in in to a page? Or can I some-how install the same module to multiple pages and pass the section information to it?
One way to do this I found myself would be to plug-in the same module to every page it will be on and then have it to parse the path of the page to figure out it's category. Not super-officiant but might work. Not sure if there is any other way.
I have a bit of a weird bug on a website I'm working on. I have multiple themes configured in the Forms Folders in Web Forms For Marketers. No matter what theme or color I select, all of my forms use the theme and color selected for the Website folder. I tested this with a clean install and it worked fine, this is a bug on my specific website.
Here's what I'm working with:
CMS 6.5.0 rev. 120427
DMS 2.0.1 rev.120427
Web Forms for Marketers-2.3.0 rev. 120216
Any ideas?
This is by design. From Sitecore Support, when I raised the same issue a while back:
Edited by Alexander Yaremenko on Thursday, November 18, 2010 at 2:10
PM
Hi Mark,
This is expected behavior. The Theme and Color defined for all forms
for the current site. If you run site (For example Site1) all web
forms will have themes from forms folder that defined in formsRoot
attribute for current site instead of theme from forms folder that
stored this form.
I have registered a wish that we can change this behavior in future.
I can't find the easier way to change this behavior now. I see only
one workaround: Create you custom control which will be insert link to
needed .css on the page. Note: the link to your .css should be defined
below then standard .css.
The Sitecore Support case reference is 336904.
In essence, WFFM assumes themes to be "per site", not multiple themes in the same site.
Are there any plug and play blog APPS for django,if so please point me to the sources for it.
I am actually looking something like word press which is of cousre difficult to integrate with django.
Thanks..
We looked into this a few months ago for our site and found that Mezzanine and Zinnia were the two best options available, and both are regularly-maintained.
Mezzanine gives you a slicker interface than Zinnia and has disqus comment integration, and has recently added Akismet integration for spam filtering on comments.
django-blog-it - complete customization and ready to use with one click installer. You can try it by hosting on your own or deploy to Heroku with a button click.
Features:
Dynamic blog articles
Blog pages
Contact us page (configurable)
google analytics
List item
SEO compliant
Actually I'm not sure but I think you might look at this one.
Also project Pinax contains blog.