I'd first like to welcome all to this new web site. Hopefully, it will help this growing community.
This first blog title my seem strange. What can be similar between a web site and InfoQube?
Consider the following pages:
- New posts
- New comments
- Blog-type home page
- RSS feeds
- Forums
- Books
- Book table of contents
- Blogs, including this present blog post
These pages are all presentation of data stored inside a database. When you enter a post or a comment, it gets stored in a database and depending on which page you open, a subset of these is displayed, with a set of additional fields (subject, date, author, rich-text content, etc)
Let me copy the above, changing just a few words (underlined):
Grids are presentation of data stored inside a database. When you enter an item and values, it gets stored in a database and depending on which grid you open, a subset of these is displayed, with a set of additional fields (subject, date, author, rich-text content, etc)
2 words were changed... The first statement describes this web-site, the second statement describes InfoQube
Interesting? Those who still struggle with the concepts behind InfoQube can sleep over this...
Nodes and comments: IQ items and sub-items
This web site is composed of nodes and comments. Comments are like sub-items of the main node. Comments can be organized into a hierarchy:
- Post 1 (Forum, Blog or book page)
- Comment 1
- Comment 2
- Comment 3
- Comment 5
- Comment 6
- Comment 4
- Post 2
- Comment 21
- etc...
Notice how this is exactly how items and sub-items are displayed in InfoQube? The similarities are striking. For the record, IQ items have more features than this web-site:
- Multiple parents
- Recursion
- Field values (Tags are used here)
- Deleting items does not automatically delete sub-items, as items have existance. i.e. they exist independant of parents, hierarchy does not need to be created from the top down and can be re-arrange at will later on.
- Pierre_Admin's Blog
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