The portfolio management system developed throughout this book will make use of existing tables in every possible scenario. However, it's hard to imagine even an average web application without using custom tables, so here we will identify the possible custom tables for our system. You might need to revert back to the planning section in the Development plan for portfolio management application section of Chapter 1, WordPress as a Web Application Framework, in order to remind the system requirements. We planned to create a functionality to allow subscribers to follow developers in the system. Let's discuss the requirement in detail to identify the potential tables.
WordPress Web Application Development
By :
WordPress Web Application Development
By:
Overview of this book
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
WordPress Web Application Development Second Edition
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Free Chapter
WordPress as a Web Application Framework
Implementing Membership Roles, Permissions, and Features
Planning and Customizing the Core Database
Building Blocks of Web Applications
Developing Pluggable Modules
Customizing the Dashboard for Powerful Backends
Adjusting Theme for Amazing Frontends
Enhancing the Power of Open Source Libraries and Plugins
Listening to Third-party Applications
Integrating and Finalizing the Portfolio Management Application
Supplementary Modules for Web Development
Configurations, Tools, and Resources
Index
Customer Reviews