I refined the distinction between "content stores" and "content providers". The concept is fairly central to the architecture, so I'm trying to get it right. I think what I've settled on now is that the content filter pipeline actually has two stages: before parsing and after parsing. So there are two interfaces IParsedContentProvider and IUnparsedContentProvider. Unparsed content providers are generally intended to provide "synthetic" topics. For example, the built-in topics like _ContentBaseDefinition and HomePage come from BuiltInTopicProvider, not from the filesystem or SQL providers. Parsed content providers, on the other hand, run after the parser, and therefore need to deal with parsing any new content they introduce. But most of them won't introduce new content - they'll just filter what comes out of the unparsed stage. Examples of parsed content providers include things like security and caching.
The software running this site. -> jump to HomePage
10/22/2006 7:52:17 AM - -81.182.199.248
Craig Andera is a consultant for Wangdera Corporation (his company). He blogs at "Pluralsight":http://pluralsight.com"","" and used to teach for DevelopMentor.
1/24/2008 8:03:42 AM - FLWCOM-jwdavidson
Place your summary text here - do not place your question in this summary box. Try to keep it at one sentence no more than 15 words.
10/8/2007 11:35:25 AM - JohnDavidson-66.78.121.176
FlexWiki is the name of the software at this site.
10/10/2008 5:02:04 PM - FLWCOM-jwdavidson
A progress report of the rearchitecture of FlexWiki headed by CraigAndera