An application for managing multiple blogs, and even *gasp* blog "sets".
Project description
Django multiblogs
==================
Built on the ArticleBase model in the One Cardinal fork of [django-articles](http://github.com/powellc/django-articles/), multiblogs
allows for multiple "sets" of blogs. Motivated by requests for both teacher and student blogs, and the need to have them segregated
on the website, multiblogs allows for multiple students to have their own blogs and to group them under one url.
URL examples of this scenario, when app is wired up to the base url of the site:
http://yourschool.com/student-voices/the-more-you-know/2011/our-new-principal/
http://yourschool.com/grade-7/fairys-and-goblins/2011/how-to-slay-werewolves/
http://yourschool.com/artsy-fartsy/photos-n-more/
Maybe you don't need blog sets? Just multiple different blogs. That's cool. Just go ahead and set your particluar blog to be part
of no set and it will hookup to the default url:
http://yourschool.com/awesome-blog/2011/one-great-post/
Of course, you can't mix and match that kind of thing, as you need to set the variable ```MULTIBLOGS_WITHOUT_SETS = TRUE``` so that we
can properly re-route urls and what-not.
Install
---------
```
pip install django-multiblogs
```
Else you could follow whatever procedure you use to install python packakges (easy_install, etc)
Configuration
--------------
Currently there is little to configure. The important part is to wire it up in your django project:
```
INSTALLED_APPS = (
...
'multiblogs',
...
)
```
Also, set:
```MULTIBLOGS_WITHOUT_SETS= TRUE```
If you do not want the infinite power of blog sets to go along with your multiple blogs.
In your urls:
```
urlpatterns += patterns('',
...
(r'^blogs/', include('multiblogs.urls')),
...
)
Templates (& URLs)
--------------------
All templates go in a 'multiblogs' directory in your TEMPLATE_DIR:
### blog_set_list.html (/)
### blog_set_detail.html (/<blog-set-slug>/)
### blog_detail.html (/<blog-set-slug>/<blog-slug>/)
### post_year_archive.html (/<blog-set-slug>/<blog-slug>/<YYYY?year>/)
### post_detail.html (/<blog-set-slug>/<blog-slug>/<YYYY?year>/<slug>/)
==================
Built on the ArticleBase model in the One Cardinal fork of [django-articles](http://github.com/powellc/django-articles/), multiblogs
allows for multiple "sets" of blogs. Motivated by requests for both teacher and student blogs, and the need to have them segregated
on the website, multiblogs allows for multiple students to have their own blogs and to group them under one url.
URL examples of this scenario, when app is wired up to the base url of the site:
http://yourschool.com/student-voices/the-more-you-know/2011/our-new-principal/
http://yourschool.com/grade-7/fairys-and-goblins/2011/how-to-slay-werewolves/
http://yourschool.com/artsy-fartsy/photos-n-more/
Maybe you don't need blog sets? Just multiple different blogs. That's cool. Just go ahead and set your particluar blog to be part
of no set and it will hookup to the default url:
http://yourschool.com/awesome-blog/2011/one-great-post/
Of course, you can't mix and match that kind of thing, as you need to set the variable ```MULTIBLOGS_WITHOUT_SETS = TRUE``` so that we
can properly re-route urls and what-not.
Install
---------
```
pip install django-multiblogs
```
Else you could follow whatever procedure you use to install python packakges (easy_install, etc)
Configuration
--------------
Currently there is little to configure. The important part is to wire it up in your django project:
```
INSTALLED_APPS = (
...
'multiblogs',
...
)
```
Also, set:
```MULTIBLOGS_WITHOUT_SETS= TRUE```
If you do not want the infinite power of blog sets to go along with your multiple blogs.
In your urls:
```
urlpatterns += patterns('',
...
(r'^blogs/', include('multiblogs.urls')),
...
)
Templates (& URLs)
--------------------
All templates go in a 'multiblogs' directory in your TEMPLATE_DIR:
### blog_set_list.html (/)
### blog_set_detail.html (/<blog-set-slug>/)
### blog_detail.html (/<blog-set-slug>/<blog-slug>/)
### post_year_archive.html (/<blog-set-slug>/<blog-slug>/<YYYY?year>/)
### post_detail.html (/<blog-set-slug>/<blog-slug>/<YYYY?year>/<slug>/)
Project details
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