Book Image

Alfresco 3 Cookbook

Book Image

Alfresco 3 Cookbook

Overview of this book

Alfresco is the renowned and multiple award winning open source Enterprise content management system which allows you to build, design, and implement your very own ECM solutions.You have read a number of tutorials, blogs, and books on Alfresco. Now you're in the real world, trying to use Alfresco, but you’re running into problems with it. This is the book you want. Packed full of solutions that can be instantly applied, this cookbook with its practical based recipes and minimal explanation meets that demand.This Alfresco 3 cookbook boasts a comprehensive selection of recipes covering everything from the basics to the advanced. The book has recipes for quickly installing Alfresco in Windows and Linux and helping you use custom content model, rules, and search. There is also a collection of recipes focused on creating Scripts, Freemarker templates, Web Scripts, and new workflow definitions. Steps to integrate Alfresco with other systems like MS-Office are also included. You will be able to use Alfresco’s File and Email servers. Finally, step-by-step recipes are presented to create an Alfresco build environment and compile the source code. This Alfresco 3 Cookbook is perfect for developers looking to start working on Alfresco quickly, gain complete understanding, write custom implementations, and achieve expertise very easily.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
Alfresco 3 Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Tagging a document


A tag is a non-hierarchical keyword associated with a content or document. Tag is part of the metadata set of a document. A tag helps describe content, and enables keyword-based classification and easy search of information.

In a content management system, it is important to tag content or a document so that finding the actual content becomes easy and accurate.

How to do it...

  1. 1. Open a particular space into which the document resides that you want to attach tags to.

  2. 2. Here, we will use the same About InfoAxon.html content we used in previous recipe. Click on View Details and open the details page of the content.

  3. 3. Alfresco offers the taggable aspect. Associating this will introduce the capability of attaching tags to a document. By default, this aspect is not associated with the uploaded or created documents, and thus tagging is not enabled for a document uploaded in Alfresco. Hence, we need to associate this aspect first in order to attach tags with this document.

  4. 4. Click...