10.02.2013 Views

PHP Programming Language - OpenLibra

PHP Programming Language - OpenLibra

PHP Programming Language - OpenLibra

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

Textpattern 319<br />

Textpattern<br />

Developer(s)<br />

Team Textpattern [1]<br />

Stable release 4.2.0 / August 28, 2009<br />

Operating<br />

system<br />

Cross-platform<br />

Type CMS/Blog software<br />

License GPL<br />

Website<br />

Textpattern.com [2]<br />

Textpattern is an open source content management system originally developed by Dean Allen. While it is often<br />

listed among weblogging tools, its aim is to be a general-purpose content management system suitable for<br />

deployment in many contexts. Textpattern is written in <strong>PHP</strong> using a MySQL database backend. The current stable<br />

version is Textpattern 4.2.0 [3]<br />

History<br />

Textpattern grew out of the system used to publish Textism [4] — the personal site of Dean Allen — and was made<br />

available to testers in alpha versions as early as 2001. The early alpha versions were followed by a series of beta<br />

releases which saw more widespread use, and which were themselves superseded by a series of "gamma" releases<br />

which expanded and refined Textpattern's capabilities. Originally some concern existed regarding licensing, but<br />

since the gamma version numbered 1.19 (released June 7, 2004), Textpattern has been distributed under the GNU<br />

General Public License.<br />

In addition to being the first GPL version of Textpattern, gamma 1.19 was the final gamma release; the next version,<br />

in September 2004, was Release Candidate 1 for Textpattern 1.0. In a somewhat unorthodox move, Textpattern<br />

continued to accumulate features as the second, third, fourth and fifth release candidates were made public. During<br />

this time the official development team, originally consisting solely of Dean Allen, expanded to include several<br />

talented contributors from the nascent Textpattern community: with Release Candidate 3 Alex Shiels [5] and Pedro<br />

Palazón [6] joined the development team, and Sencer Yurdagül [7] was brought into the fold as Textpattern's release<br />

manager with Release Candidate 4.<br />

The fifth release candidate, however, included a notice that no new features would be added before the 1.0 release,<br />

and two weeks later, on August 14, 2005, the first officially stable version of Textpattern was released. Due to the<br />

extended development process — many of the previous releases, even before the 1.0 candidates, were widely<br />

considered stable and mature enough for production use — this release was named "Textpattern 4.0" rather than<br />

"Textpattern 1.0".<br />

Shortly after the release of 4.0, Dean Allen seemingly disappeared from Textpattern and no longer contributed to its<br />

development.<br />

The stable of developers has changed as some have joined the team (Mary Fredborg, Ruud van Melick and Robert<br />

Wetzlmayr), while Alex Shiels has moved on, now employed by Automattic [8].<br />

On January 24, 2008 xPattern [9] emerged [10] as a software fork of the main Textpattern 4.0* codebase — due to<br />

perceived and unresolved communication issues [11] between select plugin writers and the Textpattern developers —

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!