Oh, sorry. ;-) This is the original page, and has a source link. (http://weblogs.macromedia.com/mc/archives/disclosableRTE.zip)
If you like that sort of thing, here's a few more flex resources. Forgive if this if off topic. Adobe Flex downloads page: http://www.adobe.com/products/flex/flexdownloads/ Nice, free actionscript / Flex IDE: http://www.flashdevelop.org/community/ I you want any help getting it compiled/changed/working, let me know. Marcus -----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Andrew Gehring Sent: Wednesday, November 19, 2008 10:45 AM To: radiant@radiantcms.org Subject: Re: [Radiant] Can Radiant be really easy to usefornon-technicalcontent editors? I didn't mean your post was off topic, I meant mine might be :-) What/where is the source to the app? Thanks, Andrew On Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 11:41 AM, Marcus Blankenship <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Sorry, then. Yes, the Flex language/compiler is open source, and that app > was as well. > > -----Original Message----- > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Andrew Gehring > Sent: Wednesday, November 19, 2008 10:39 AM > To: radiant@radiantcms.org > Subject: Re: [Radiant] Can Radiant be really easy to use > fornon-technicalcontent editors? > > Off topic, possibly... > > But is that FLEX app open source? > > Andrew > > On Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 11:28 AM, Marcus Blankenship <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > wrote: >> Another thought, crazy as it might be, would be to create a FLEX >> component that represents a content editor. We do this on some of >> our flex apps, and it works well. Here's an example: >> http://cfsilence.com/blog/tips/rte/bin/richTextEditor.cfm >> >> This might allow for more control than JS based editors give, I'm not sure. >> >> Just another thought, from a FLEX nerd. >> >> Marcus >> >> -----Original Message----- >> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Casper Fabricius >> Sent: Wednesday, November 19, 2008 10:21 AM >> To: radiant@radiantcms.org >> Subject: Re: [Radiant] Can Radiant be really easy to use for >> non-technicalcontent editors? >> >> I am happy my frustrations resulted in some discussion and good ideas. >> The ideas for extensions for a scratch pad, filter toolbars and som >> WymEditor + paperclipped would all be highly usable to me, but I don't have >> the time to build any of them right now. >> >> I have used TinyMCE filter for some projects, but it has - amongst other >> things - resulted in me having to say to the customer: "No, you have to let >> me edit the frontpage, if you edit it, it will get messed up" (Because >> TinyMCE has a habit of messing HTML up). But WymEditor might be more clean >> at that, so I think I'll try and use it. >> >> The template extension can do many of the things you mention, such as >> providing custom forms for different templates, and allowing the user to >> select the appropriate template when clicking "Add Child". >> >> I'll let you know if I make any interesting discoveries along the way. >> >> Med venlig hilsen / Best regards, >> Casper Fabricius >> http://casperfabricius.com >> >> On 19/11/2008, at 10.19, Simon Rönnqvist wrote: >> >>> Hi! >>> >>> Yes some WymEditor + paperclipped combination could be really cool. >>> I've never really used WymEditor for any of my clients.. but I've >>> tried both Markdown and a tightly configured TinyMCE (which would be >>> pretty close to WymEditor). With Markdown I've seen that the content >>> remains largely unstyled, the client eg. just used UPPERCASE-letters >>> for headings and so on... maybe a Markdown-toolbar would help >>> stimulate the usage of Markdown-code? With the TinyMCE solution >>> again stuff got marked up a bit inconsistently, and often using >>> <strong> for some headings, even though it didn't cause quite the >>> mess that a normal 'liberal' WYSIWYG would have. >>> >>> My guess is that using WymEditor would be a good way to give your >>> customer a way to try and express what she's looking for, but >>> chances are that you'll have to go in and clean up after her a few times... >>> but along with that you could also try to agree with her on certain >>> practices in the future, to retain consistency. I've been searching >>> for the perfect solution for quite some time, but I've begun >>> thinking that this last step of cleaning up and educating can't >>> really be avoided if you want perfect results... we can just try to >>> minimize this last task. Markdown+toolbar could also be something to >>> try out, but I fear it might still be considered a bit too >>> intimidating (and Textile I find even more intimidating). >>> >>> Another thing that I've been thinking that could be suitable for >>> some cases (but I haven't tried out) is in-place editing... but I >>> don't know how well that'd fit into Radiant. And yes forms (using >>> your own >>> plug-in) or splitting content into many page parts could definitely >>> also in some cases be the right solution... but in cases where we >>> want to allow more flexibility, to allow the customer to structure >>> their content more freely... we're probably better off going with >>> some WymEditor-like solution + cleaning up and education. >>> >>> Apart from the actual editing of content, it'd be really cool to >>> find and easy way to hide some stuff in Radiant from the customer. >>> Eg. some things such as the CSS and RSS things, and sometimes some >>> page-parts. And maybe in some cases even the popup menus: layout, >>> page type, status and filter. >>> >>> cheers, Simon >>> PS. I begun the search for the perfect solution to this in my >>> thesis, if anyone's interested: http://simon.fi/en/thesis >>> >>> >>> On Nov 18, 2008, at 20:46 , Mohit Sindhwani wrote: >>> >>>> Casper Fabricius wrote: >>>>> However, I have a client whose content editor is very frustrated >>>>> with the system. She can only just tolerate using Markup, and she >>>>> refuses to write any kind of HTML - Radius tags falls into this >>>>> category from her point of view. According to her, a proper CMS >>>>> would hide all this "technical stuff" and provide custom forms for >>>>> all types of content. >>>>> >>>> Casper, my "solution" would be to find a slightly more technical >>>> client :P No, I'm joking (of course!) >>>> >>>> Here's what I would recommend: >>>> 1. First, factor out as far as possible so that whatever is not >>>> page specific is in snippets. >>>> 2. If all she needs is a few styles of pages, I would create >>>> different page types or layouts. >>>> 3. Then tell her that the different parts that she wants need to go >>>> into different page parts. It would be cool if you could modify >>>> the "Add Child" behavior to allow you to select the kind of child >>>> page you want and then give you a blank page with all the different >>>> tabs created (page parts)... or it could be done with a bit of >>>> Javascript that detects when you change the Layout/ page and >>>> automatically adds in the different page parts? It could even be a >>>> special drop down box next to the Page Type that triggers the actions? >>>> 4. The problem: she still needs to use textile for some of the >>>> things, such as images. I'm not sure if the Textile Helper will >>>> help? It's been a while since I looked at it, but there's a hello >>>> world guide on my blog: >>>> http://notepad.onghu.com/2007/3/28/using-textile-editor-plugin-and- >>>> a c ts_as_textiled It could make some things easier for her, I >>>> hope... >>>> without going down the path of WYSIWIG. >>>> >>>> If you do go down WYSIWIG, I hear good things about WymEditor - and >>>> Benny's on the list! >>>> >>>> Of course, Casper, you are more experienced than I am. Do let us >>>> know what you eventually settle on :) >>>> >>>> Cheers, >>>> Mohit. >>>> 11/19/2008 | 2:45 AM. >>>> >>>> >>>> _______________________________________________ >>>> Radiant mailing list >>>> Post: Radiant@radiantcms.org >>>> Search: http://radiantcms.org/mailing-list/search/ >>>> Site: http://lists.radiantcms.org/mailman/listinfo/radiant >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> Radiant mailing list >>> Post: Radiant@radiantcms.org >>> Search: http://radiantcms.org/mailing-list/search/ >>> Site: http://lists.radiantcms.org/mailman/listinfo/radiant >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Radiant mailing list >> Post: Radiant@radiantcms.org >> Search: http://radiantcms.org/mailing-list/search/ >> Site: http://lists.radiantcms.org/mailman/listinfo/radiant >> _______________________________________________ >> Radiant mailing list >> Post: Radiant@radiantcms.org >> Search: http://radiantcms.org/mailing-list/search/ >> Site: http://lists.radiantcms.org/mailman/listinfo/radiant >> > _______________________________________________ > Radiant mailing list > Post: Radiant@radiantcms.org > Search: http://radiantcms.org/mailing-list/search/ > Site: http://lists.radiantcms.org/mailman/listinfo/radiant > _______________________________________________ > Radiant mailing list > Post: Radiant@radiantcms.org > Search: http://radiantcms.org/mailing-list/search/ > Site: http://lists.radiantcms.org/mailman/listinfo/radiant > _______________________________________________ Radiant mailing list Post: Radiant@radiantcms.org Search: http://radiantcms.org/mailing-list/search/ Site: http://lists.radiantcms.org/mailman/listinfo/radiant _______________________________________________ Radiant mailing list Post: Radiant@radiantcms.org Search: http://radiantcms.org/mailing-list/search/ Site: http://lists.radiantcms.org/mailman/listinfo/radiant