Contributors: A-Z Index
A
Name | Photograph | Title / Role | Contributions / Notes | |
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Allen Ellis | Founder |
Original designer for ocPortal Also conceived and coded the Theme Wizard and Point Store Son of one of the early inventors of Internet protocols (Usenet, aka Internet newsgroups) Token non-brit |
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C
Name | Photograph | Title / Role | Contributions / Notes | |
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Chris Graham | Founder |
Original developer of ocPortal, former lead developer of Composr CMS Masters degree in Computer Science from The University Of Sheffield Undertaken work for over 15 FTSE-100 companies, as well as many small and mid-sized organisations. Includes a number of banks and major brands. |
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Chris Warburton | developer for ocProducts |
Made some key contributions to ocPortal |
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H
Name | Photograph | Title / Role | Contributions / Notes | |
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Haydn Maidment | project manager for ocProducts |
None available |
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J
Name | Photograph | Title / Role | Contributions / Notes | |
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Jim Davidson | contributor |
written many tutorials via Arvixe |
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P
Name | Photograph | Title / Role | Contributions / Notes | |
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Patrick Schmalstig | Lead Developer |
Joined Chris Graham behind the scenes in the development of Composr CMS in 2016. Took on the lead developer role in 2023 when Chris Graham stepped back to attend to his new lifestyle changes. Spearheaded the development of Composr CMS v11 and the new website, Composr.app. Formed the company PDStig, LLC to take on professional support and development for Composr CMS users especially after the discontinuation of ocProducts, Ltd. |
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Philip Withnall | Early Developer |
Coded the chatroom, blogging support, the analytics system, and OcCLE (now Commandr) Masters Degree in Computer Science degree from The University Of Cambridge Other work has included helping out with Firefox, and ongoing work on GNOME |
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R
Name | Photograph | Title / Role | Contributions / Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Robert Goacher | Founder |
Ran some of the early websites where ocPortal came from Technically the original developer of ocPortal, in that he wrote the first few lines of code Heavily involved in the feature design process Hosted some of our early meet-ups |
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S
Name | Photograph | Title / Role | Contributions / Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Steve Jarvis | project manager for ocProducts |
Wrote many tutorials via Arvixe |
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Newest 10 Entries
Question | What are some of the default endpoints available in the server-side API? |
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Answer | Default endpoints cover various functionalities, including:
Specific details on parameters and response data for each endpoint can be found in the documentation. |
Question | How does authentication work with the server-side API? |
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Answer | Authentication is handled automatically using cookies, similar to regular website requests. If cookies are not feasible, the response parameters device_auth_member_id_cn/device_auth_pass_hashed_cn/device_auth_member_id_vl/device_auth_pass_hashed_vl from the login endpoint can be resent as POST parameters in subsequent requests. |
Question | How do I access the server-side API for my mobile app? |
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Answer | The server-side API can be accessed via HTTP calls to http://yourbaseurl/data/endpoint.php. Results are returned in JSON format. The API utilizes endpoints with a 'hook' name and a 'hook type' categorization. Both REST-style and GET-parameter style requests are supported, with the latter recommended for simplicity. |
Question | What is the purpose of the Composr Mobile SDK Toolkit? |
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Answer | The Toolkit, part of the composr_mobile_sdk addon, aids in mirroring Composr website resources into a mobile app. It includes tools for generating iOS/Android string resources from language files and exporting theme images in a directory structure suitable for iOS/Android app image assets. |
Question | How can I obtain Composr Mobile SDK? |
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Answer | The iOS/Android SDK can be found on GitLab at: Composr ecosystem / Composr Mobile SDK · GitLab. To connect to a Composr site, you will need to install the composr_mobile_sdk addon, which is not bundled. This addon provides scripting to generate app assets from the Composr site. |
Question | What is Composr Mobile SDK? |
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Answer | Composr Mobile SDK (CMS SDK) is a toolkit designed for experienced iOS and Android developers to build mobile apps that integrate with a Composr-powered website. It offers both Composr-specific integrations and a collection of standalone utilities for building apps, providing a common base between iOS and Android akin to the PHP and Composr APIs, enabling easier code porting while maintaining a native experience. |
Question | What is the Composr maintenance policy? |
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Answer | Composr follows a rolling release model. This means:
This policy allows developers to focus resources on the latest versions and encourages users to leverage the ongoing improvements. You can find the release status on the Composr maintenance status page. |
Question | What are the general courtesy guidelines for interacting with the Composr community? |
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Answer |
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Question | How can I provide design feedback for Composr? |
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Answer | Constructive design feedback is valuable. To provide effective feedback:
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Question | How do I make a feature suggestion for Composr? |
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Answer | You can suggest features through the tracker or the Report Issue Wizard. When making a suggestion:
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Top 10 Entries
Question | How do I set the correct file permissions for Composr? |
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Answer | If you're using the quick installer, it will handle file permissions automatically. On a suEXEC-style server, default permissions (744 for directories and 644 for files) are usually sufficient. However, _config.php should have 600 permissions for security. Without suEXEC, specific directories (e.g., caches, uploads) and files (e.g., _config.php) require 777 (full access) or 666 (read/write) permissions. The fixperms.php script can automate this process on Linux and Windows. |
Question | How do I install Composr on Linux? |
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Answer | After ensuring your web host meets the requirements and you have a database ready, you can install Composr on Linux using the following steps:
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Question | What are the prerequisites for installing Composr? |
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Answer | Before installing Composr, ensure your web host meets the minimum requirements. Familiarize yourself with your web host's control panel (e.g., Plesk, cPanel), which you'll use to manage databases, subdomains, and other settings. Gather your SFTP/FTP credentials (hostname, username, password), usually emailed upon signup. Set up a MySQL database and note its details: hostname (often 'localhost'), username, password, and database name. Ensure the database user has full read/write/administer access to the database. |
Question | What tools are available for debugging Composr code? |
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Answer | Composr offers a code quality checker addon that helps identify various types of errors, including parser errors, run-time errors, and logical errors. This tool can significantly reduce debugging time and enhance code reliability. It is available through the testing_platform addon. |
Question | What are some key coding standards in Composr? |
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Answer | Composr emphasizes clean, well-structured code with a focus on readability and maintainability. Key standards include proper indentation, consistent use of comments, and clear function headers with type definitions. Remember: beautiful code leads to better functionality and collaboration! |
Question | Where can I find resources for learning PHP programming? |
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Answer | While Composr documentation doesn't cover basic PHP, resources like the official PHP documentation ( |
Question | What is the purpose of the Code Editor? |
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Answer | The Code Editor is a web-based tool for editing Composr code files directly on the server. It requires password authentication and automatically manages overrides within _custom directories. To access it, go to yourbaseurl/code_editor.php. |
Question | How can I export and import custom addons? |
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Answer | Composr allows exporting addons as TAR files, containing all necessary files and an addon.inf file for metadata. You can import these addons to share and reuse them across different Composr installations. To do this, make your necessary files for the addon in the Composr installation, and then go under Admin Zone > Structure > Addons > Export addon. You can select the relevant files for the addon, provide information about the addon, and then download the TAR file (which can then be imported on other Composr sites). |
Question | Can you give an example of creating a new module? |
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Answer | Imagine creating a "Testing" module to manage collaborative testing:
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Question | What are the different ways to extend Composr functionality? |
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Answer | You can extend Composr through:
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