A user level on a Joomla site that can write and submit articles. Author has access to functions from the front end only.
Protéger - Héberger - Accompagner - Rassurer - Écouter
The powerful T3 Framework makes Purity III an extreme flexible for customization especially when it comes to layout configuration, and compatible with all the popular 3rd party extensions out there in the community.
Purity III is compatible with Joomla 3.x and embraces Bootstrap 3 at core. Comes with all the outstanding cool features in Joomla 3.x core, as well as the changes and improvements Bootstrap 3 Framework has.
Purity III is a fully responsive FREE Joomla template. It looks stunning on all screen sizes: from a wide screen to mobile devices. Definitely a responsive Joomla template you would never want to miss out for 2014, We promise.
Sleek look, clean coding and minimalism design, Purity is real flat both front-end and back-end. It is also packed with beautiful typography pages including: Support Policy and Pricing Table that indeed, will come in handy for anyone.
A user level on a Joomla site that can write and submit articles. Author has access to functions from the front end only.
Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) is a protocol designed to access directory systems over TCP/IP. Because of this various databases provide an LDAP interface such as Microsoft's Active Directory, Novell's eDirectory, as well as more dedicated LDAP solutions such as OpenLDAP.
Joomla! has had a native LDAP library (joomla.client.ldap
(changed to JClientLDAP in Joomla 3.x)) and a native LDAP authentication plugin. This allows Joomla! to authenticate against LDAP systems out of the box: to configure, go to the Plugin Manager and enable and edit the Authentication - LDAP plugin.
You can also read a tutorial on getting started from scratch with LDAP.
Reference: http://docs.joomla.org/Glossary
In Joomla! an Article is a piece of content consisting of text (HTML), possibly with links to other resources (for example, images). Articles are the basic units of information in the content system and the bottom level in the content hierarchy. Since Joomla! 2.5 , each Article is in exactly one Category. A Category can be in another Category making it a sub Category. It is also possible to have Uncategorised Articles. These articles exist without being associated with any Category.
Before Joomla! 2.5 and earlier versions, an Article was the third level in the hierarchy Sections ? Categories ? Articles. Now an Article is a bottom level and will alway be the second level or greater in hierarchy.
Category ? Articles
Category ? sub Category ? Articles
Category ? sub Category ? sub Category ? Articles
Articles are maintained using the Article Manager (see the Content Article Manager for or the Content Article Manager for ) which can be reached in the Administrator (Back-end) by clicking on the Content menu, then the Article Manager menu item.
Reference: http://docs.joomla.org/Glossary
Files that gives you control over the display of modules or components.
Override files are placed in special folders and can be used in place of the standard layout files. Unlike Template Overrides, which override layout files of the same name, Layout Overrides are additional layout files that give you more options and control.
In Joomla!, a Menu is a set of menu items used for website navigation. Each menu item defines an URL to a page on your site, and settings that control the contents(articles, category(ies) lists, taggged items, etc.) and style(module(s), layout) of that page. Additionally, each menu has a Menu Type, these are shown in the menu manager, see Adding a new menu. The menu type will actually be the Unique Name or alias that will be used to create human-readable URLs if Search Engine Friendly URLs are turned on. Menu items can have any number of subitems.
A Menu isn't automatically shown on any page. You need to create a menu module to show the menu on all or some pages. Each menu can be shown by one or more modules (making it possible to show the same menu in different positions). It is also possible to create Split menus.
A Menu that isn't shown by any module is usually called a hidden menu. Hidden menus can be used to create URLs that are not visible on any page.
Reference: http://docs.joomla.org/Glossary