Finding a place for EZPDO docs

Originally I put all EZPDO docs into a Wiki (DokuWiki). See here. The DokuWiki syntax (not sure if it follows the generic Wiki syntax or do we really have one?) is really easy to learn and use. As a Wiki, it certainly proivides an excellent venue for collabration among document writers.

The problem is that it does not allow a reader to input his/her comments when browsing, which should be seperate from contents. Instead of openning the Wiki content to public, we want only a group of designated developers/writers to be able to update it, but at the same time we do want to know what readers think. It is our belief that having the readers’ feedback is of ultimate importantance in improving our documents/development, and helping people adopt the new EZPDO package.

So I was looking for something more than just a Wiki, something that would combine both Blog and Wiki. I am tempted by the new release of WordPress 1.5 and hoping to find some solution to bridge DokuWiki and WordPress - a bliki.

When googling, I found this hack by Jens interesting. Just before I thought I had exhausted the Internet, I found this one. Not exactly for DokuWiki, but I will take a shot and see what comes out of it.

One user comment

  1. EZPDO: Eazy PHP Data Objects » Blog Archive » DokuWiki + WordPress = dwBliki on March 3rd, 2005:

    […] e. dwBiliki-0.1 is out. As you have quickly guessed, d = DokuWiki and w = WordPress. See this and that for what motivated me to work on dwBliki. dwBliki is a WordPress plugin that makes use of the Wor […]

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