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ExpressionEngine 2.0: fully CodeIgnited!

March 14, 2008 8:45am

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  • #61 / Mar 17, 2008 10:58pm

    JayTee

    108 posts

    I’ve typically drawn a very dark line between which client sites I develop in CI and which ones in EE.  It’s all about what they want to accomplish with their site.  There’s no checklist, necessarily, but I just “know” when one will work better than the other.

    Now that EE will be running on CI, it will be really nice to give my clients the power of EE and the ease of writing their custom CI features without having to decide between the two.  It’s a no-brainer to add the extra $250 to the development cost; especially considering the power it brings.

    Cheers to the EE team 😊

  • #62 / Mar 24, 2008 11:29pm

    qwertyqwerty

    11 posts

    I’m so stoked this functionality has finally arrived.

    I must admit that I thought about jumping ship to using the Zend Framework so many times and the main reason why I haven’t is the thought of having a great easy to use framework with a kick ass bolt-on CMS and hooray, that day is fast approaching.

    A big thank you to all involved and I wouldn’t be suprised if a lot (I mean a LOT) more people now start using Code Igniter because of this!

  • #63 / Mar 27, 2008 11:21am

    Crssp-ee

    572 posts

    Derek mentioned the easy table sorting code in his post.
    Check out jqGrid, it’s some advanced stuff:
    http://trirand.com/jqgrid/jqgrid.html -demo Try clicking some of the tree links on the left.
    http://plugins.jquery.com/project/jqGrid -plugin homepage

    I can just see all of this stuff getting integrated also.
    Like create a weblog and boom it’s in the grid.
    jQuery is kind of to javascript what EE is to php, you don’t have to have full understanding to plug things in.
    But this is the Ci crowd here, the PHP geeks are in the house.
    There are so many jQuery plugins coming out it’s hard to keep up.

  • #64 / Mar 27, 2008 1:40pm

    Dan Decker

    7338 posts

    I would love just a little more exposition on the JQuery/CI integration and just how easy it will be to use our framework of choice. Personally, I’ve cottoned to scriptaculous, but I can make the move to JQuery if need be.

  • #65 / Mar 27, 2008 1:51pm

    John Macpherson

    113 posts

    Derek i came on especially to ask this question:

    Can i use MooTools /other frameworks with EE2.0? The thought of using ajax / js with EE really excites me!

    Im more of a dabbler than expert with Javscript, but i believe MooTools offers more power. I can see why JQuery has been chosen though

  • #66 / Apr 12, 2008 3:41pm

    Bjørn Børresen

    629 posts

    TheStig: in his original blogpost he states that you can write a driver for mootools 😉

    Derek, this is just awesome, awesome news! This was the no. 1 pre-sales question I asked, in fact let me quote myself here:

    1. Is EE built on CI? If I enjoy programming with CI, will I enjoy programming in EE?

    finally you guys can answer YES! :D

    It’s just amazing to see the direction this is taking. I love it! 😊

    Kudos to EllisLab!

    - bjorn

  • #67 / Apr 13, 2008 11:14am

    cjorgensen

    393 posts

    Dumb question, and maybe one better asked on the CI site, but do you need to know php to use this framework? Would it be better to start with php or CI (assuming I know neither)? I have a modicum of mysql experience if that matters at all.

  • #68 / Apr 13, 2008 11:19am

    Bjørn Børresen

    629 posts

    Christoper: Start with PHP, then learn CI .. CI is a framework built on PHP, so yeas, you would need to know php to use it 😊

    - bjorn

  • #69 / Apr 13, 2008 2:11pm

    Derek Jones

    7561 posts

    Actually, using CI is a great way to learn PHP, so just dive right in, Christopher, with the aid of the CI User Guide.

  • #70 / Apr 14, 2008 2:57am

    Greg Aker

    6022 posts

    Watching the videos on codeigniter.com and Derek Allards videos on http://video.derekallard.com really helped me in my php abilities.  Between those and some experiments, I was able to make a good, usable website for a friend in Code Igniter.  The community is as good as EE, and there is a lot of cross over.  People over there are more than willing to help you out.  It will really help you develop some serious PHP chops, which will make you an even better EE developer!!!!

    -greg

  • #71 / Apr 28, 2008 10:19am

    Sceneshift

    39 posts

    I hope someone can help clear this up for me.

    Having used EE and CI a while, I am a little confused as to how I can “implement” EE into my CodeIgniter applications. For example, I have recently developed a site which has user management and custom page content… to do so I used the CI user libraries and my own custom CMS code for the pages. Lets say one day I think “Hey, I think this site could use a forum, I’ll install EE and install the forum module” would it seamlessly integrate or would I have to recode / restructure my application in order to incorporate EE?

    Whilst this news is great, I can’t help but feel like anything I code at the moment for future projects is going to redundant in a few months when V2 comes out. Especially if I coded my own CI forum system only to be able to pop EE in there to do all the hard work for me :(

  • #72 / Apr 28, 2008 10:26am

    Derek Jones

    7561 posts

    The Discussion Forum module interfaces with ExpressionEngine’s Member module, so it would not be a drop-in and switch-on using a custom user database.  That said, ExpressionEngine has a very simple XML-based member import utility that would make it easy to transfer your existing user data into EE’s Member module.  After that, the level of difficulty for further integration would depend on how much code you’d have to modify to work with EE’s member schema vs. your home grown version.  It could be dead simple, but depending on the project it could be a somewhat significant migratory task.

  • #73 / Apr 28, 2008 10:30am

    Sceneshift

    39 posts

    The Discussion Forum module interfaces with ExpressionEngine’s Member module, so it would not be a drop-in and switch-on using a custom user database.  That said, ExpressionEngine has a very simple XML-based member import utility that would make it easy to transfer your existing user data into EE’s Member module.  After that, the level of difficulty for further integration would depend on how much code you’d have to modify to work with EE’s member schema vs. your home grown version.  It could be dead simple, but depending on the project it could be a somewhat significant migratory task.


    Thanks for the quick reply. I suppose it’s better to hold out for V2 so that I can create a system which integrates nicely with EE’s member module. Is user management something that will be structured specifically with EE in mind for the new version?

  • #74 / Apr 28, 2008 10:34am

    Derek Jones

    7561 posts

    Member management is already a built-in feature of licensed versions of ExpressionEngine: 2.0 will continue to carry that torch, of course.

  • #75 / Apr 28, 2008 10:35am

    John Fuller

    779 posts

    I wouldn’t hold out for anything.  Do it now!  😉

    Perhaps you could develop your app in EE rather than CI.

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