Book Image

concrete5: Beginner's Guide - Second Edition - Second Edition

Book Image

concrete5: Beginner's Guide - Second Edition - Second Edition

Overview of this book

concrete5 is an open source content management system (CMS) for publishing content on the World Wide Web and intranets. concrete5 is designed for ease of use, and for users with limited technical skills. It enables users to edit site content directly from the page. It provides version management for every page and allows users to edit images through an embedded editor on the page. concrete5 Beginner's Guide shows you everything you need to get your own site up and running in no time. You will then learn how to change the look of it before you find out all you need to add custom functionality to concrete5. concrete5 Beginner's Guide starts with installation, then you customize the look and feel and continue to add your own functionality. After you've installed and configured your own concrete5 site, we'll have a closer look at themes and integrate a simple layout into concrete5. Afterwards, we're going to build a block from scratch which you can use to manage a news section. We're also going to add a button to our site which can be used to create a PDF document on the fly. This book also covers some examples that show you how to integrate an existing jQuery plugin. concrete5 Beginner's Guide is a book for developers looking to get started with concrete5 in order to create great websites and applications.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Pop Quiz Answers
Index

Time for action – installing a block


Now that we've created all the files, we can install our block.

  1. Focus the Intelligent Search box and type Block Types.

  2. You should see your new block on top of the list. Click on the Install button next to it and concrete5 will install it.

  3. Edit a page of your choice and add a new instance of our block, enter the necessary data and you'll get a structured output of the three fields.

What just happened?

We created all the files needed for a custom block, installed it and added it to an existing page. That's all it takes to build a basic concrete5 block.

Checking for mandatory fields

If we wanted to make sure there were no products without pictures, we could add a few more lines of code.