![]() You get the idea, the developers page looks pretty much like the demo content of the theme they picked out. Maybe the theme has a place for a Google map to be inserted. The theme will have a place perhaps for a big banner image at the top of the page, them maybe they add some text and a few more images. This class of developer picks a theme they like and loads it up on top a clean WordPress installation and basically “fills in the blanks” with there own content. To pick up where Marmiz left off let me explain how I see WordPress being used.įirst there is the beginner WordPress developer/user. Hey I’ll take a crack at answering this, my work is 100% WordPress. The three can coexists: there are lot of use cases where you want a separate CMS, then rely on a SSG for the repetitive stuff and fill in the blanks with your own code. That’s where ssg comes in handy: you create and define a “skeleton” and let the ssg generate the pages for you filling the blanks where needed. Imagine you have your own blog with hundreds of articles: would you manually write all pages, when they all have the same structure in common, but the content? The main purpose and usage of a SSG is for when you want to create a lot of “identical” pages but just the content changes. Think of a big company: you may have a marketing department that adds and create new content for the website, but the Frontend team still have to grab that content and display it nicely. The main purpose of a CMS is to give both non-tech and tech guy a common playground where to add and manage content. Maybe you are thinking Wordpress as CMS, and yes, it does create a page for you, but that’s an extra. “coding from scratch” a CMS and a SSG (Static Site Generator) are three totally different subjects that In my opinion don’t overlap too much: all three can easily coexists.Ĭms are a very easy and efficient way to manage your content: that doesn’t mean they code for you.
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