Book Image

Building Websites with the ASP.NET Community Starter Kit

1 (1)
Book Image

Building Websites with the ASP.NET Community Starter Kit

1 (1)

Overview of this book

Microsoft's ASP.NET Community Starter Kit (CSK) is a powerful, freely available application that allows you to quickly create a fully featured community-driven website, complete with article and news management, downloads, forums, and user handling. Supported and tested by thousands of developers in the ASP.NET community across the world, the Community Starter Kit offers you the luxury of a scalable and extensible architecture, and the ability to brand your own site. This book will take you inside the Community Starter Kit, allowing you to harness its power for easily creating your own websites. The book is structured to help you understand, implement and extend the Community Starter Kit: Understand how the Community Starter Kit works. Build the skills to implement your own site. Develop the confidence to extend the system for your own needs. With this book, you will learn how to: Install and configure the CSK Find your way around the CSKs towering range of features Create and administer community websites Become familiar with the common CSK ASP.NET controls Customize your CSK site Discover the secrets of the CSK core architecture Explore the inner workings of CSK modules Extend the CSK by creating new modules Customize existing modules with Web controls Add an RSS feed to share your content with others Deploy your CSK website This book is for ASP.NET developers with a sound grasp of C# and access to Visual Studio .NET. This book uses the Visual Studio. NET version of the ASP.NET Community Starter Kit available from http://www.asp.net/StarterKits/
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
TrixBox Made Easy
Credits
About the Authors
Introduction
CSK Controls

Creating Themes


Creating a theme implies creating a new theme folder in Communities/Common/Themes for the theme to be visible from all communities, or in Communities/community_folder_name/Themes if the theme is to be visible to a single community.

The new theme folder must have the same structure as the already existing theme folders. In other words, it should have a Styles subfolder that contains one or more CSS files, and a Skins subfolder, with four subfolders: ContentSkins, ControlSkins, PageSkins, and TemplateSkins.

Once the new theme folder and its components are in place, the new theme (its skin and styles) will be visible in the Edit Sections/Edit Section/Appearance folder. You don’t need to recompile or restart the application. The simplest way to test this is to copy one of the existing theme folders (such as Arc or Frida) to a folder named MyCopiedTheme, in the same location.

No matter what kind of skin file you’re developing (page skin, content skin, control skin, or template skin...