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WordPress vs. Expression Engine

November 02, 2008 6:44pm

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  • #1 / Nov 02, 2008 6:44pm

    Marcus H.

    3 posts

    Bear with me—it was the best title that came to my mind. 😉

    I’m using WordPress for one of my Web sites. While searching for “the right” CMS (to transfer one of my existing content-rich static HTML sites into) I found people stating that Expression Engine would be more flexible than WordPress, but I could not find explicit examples which clearly support this statement (yet). So…

    What exactly makes EE a smarter choice over WordPress? Where exactly, in your opinion, is EE more flexible? What can EE do that WordPress cannot?

    Again, we’re having a CMS in mind, not a blogging platform.

    ~Marcus

  • #2 / Nov 02, 2008 7:32pm

    Leslie Camacho

    1340 posts

    Hi Marcus,

    A better approach is to tell us what you need and we’ll tell you if EE can handle it or not. Just because one platform has a longer feature or a trendy feature doesn’t make it better or worse, it just depends on what you need to accomplish.

    However, I will say that you’ve likely answered your own question:

    Again, we’re having a CMS in mind, not a blogging platform.

    This is the primary difference. Wordpress is a blogging platform, EE is a web publishing/CMS platform that happens to have blogging roots. Richard (an EE user) wrote up an Wordpress v. ExpressionEngine article on the EE wiki that expands on this idea. You can also search on this forum for many different opinions. There are actually a number of EE users who use EE and WP (and other solutions) and select their solution of choice based on the project requirement. Generally speaking when a client needs to power a website (versus just a blog) EE is the front-runner.

    I would say another key difference between EE and just about any other platform (blogging or not) is that EE is designed to make as little assumptions for you as possible. This is where its flexibility is. For example, a single template can have zero blogs, 1 blog, 100 blogs. And those “blogs” don’t have to be blogs in the traditional sense. They can be any data that is the database that you pull out and display wherever you want. EE is pretty unique in this approach.

    In other words, EE does not assume any default relationship between stored content in the database (EE blogs) and visual presentation of that data (EE templates). You can mix and match as you please.

    You might consider going through Train-ee’s free tutorials for some examples of this or check out EE Screencasts.

    And, of course, you can try before you buy.

  • #3 / Nov 04, 2008 12:17am

    Marcus H.

    3 posts

    Thank you very much for your response, Leslie. Much appreciated. I’ll swim through your forums a bit more.

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