Traditional Wiki System
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
A Traditional Wiki System is a wiki system that follows traditional wiki principles of traditional wiki collaborative editing and traditional wiki simple markup (as originally conceived in the late 1990s).
- AKA: Classic Wiki System, First-Generation Wiki, Original Wiki Platform.
- Context:
- It can typically enable Traditional Wiki Page Creation through traditional wiki text editing.
- It can typically support Traditional Wiki Collaborative Editing via traditional wiki version control.
- It can typically implement Traditional Wiki Hyperlinking through traditional wiki CamelCase conventions.
- It can typically maintain Traditional Wiki Page History using traditional wiki revision tracking.
- It can typically provide Traditional Wiki Recent Changes for traditional wiki community awareness.
- ...
- It can often use Traditional Wiki Markup Language for traditional wiki content formatting.
- It can often enable Traditional Wiki User Contributions through traditional wiki open editing.
- It can often support Traditional Wiki Page Discussions via traditional wiki talk pages.
- It can often implement Traditional Wiki Search Functions for traditional wiki content discovery.
- ...
- It can range from being a Simple Traditional Wiki System to being a Complex Traditional Wiki System, depending on its traditional wiki feature complexity.
- It can range from being a Single-User Traditional Wiki System to being a Large-Scale Traditional Wiki System, depending on its traditional wiki deployment scale.
- ...
- It can integrate with Web Servers for traditional wiki page serving.
- It can connect to Database Systems for traditional wiki content storage.
- It can interface with Email Systems for traditional wiki change notification.
- It can communicate with Authentication Systems for traditional wiki user management.
- It can synchronize with Backup Systems for traditional wiki data preservation.
- ...
- Examples:
- Traditional Wiki Software Implementations, such as:
- Original Traditional Wiki Implementations, such as:
- WikiWikiWeb (1995), the traditional wiki original implementation.
- TWiki (1998), for traditional wiki enterprise collaboration.
- Open-Source Traditional Wiki Platforms, such as:
- MediaWiki (2002), powering traditional wiki encyclopedia projects.
- DokuWiki (2004), for traditional wiki documentation management.
- Original Traditional Wiki Implementations, such as:
- Traditional Wiki Deployment Instances, such as:
- Public Traditional Wiki Sites, such as:
- Wikipedia (2001), demonstrating traditional wiki collaborative encyclopedia.
- Wiktionary (2002), for traditional wiki dictionary creation.
- Corporate Traditional Wiki Systems, such as:
- Public Traditional Wiki Sites, such as:
- Traditional Wiki Feature Sets, such as:
- Traditional Wiki Core Features, such as:
- Traditional Wiki Extended Features, such as:
- ...
- Traditional Wiki Software Implementations, such as:
- Counter-Examples:
- Modern Wiki Systems, which include advanced features beyond traditional wiki functionality.
- Semantic Wiki Systems, which add semantic annotations to traditional wiki content.
- AI-Enhanced Wiki Systems, which use artificial intelligence for content generation.
- See: Wiki System, Semantic Wiki System, WikiWikiWeb, Wiki Markup Language, Collaborative Editing System.