TiddlyWiki is a complete wiki in a single HTML file. It contains the entire text of the wiki, and all the JavaScript, CSS and HTML goodness to be able to display it, and let you edit it or search it. Without needing a server.
>>>Quite bizarre somehow.<<<
MindTouch Deki Wiki is a free open source wiki and application platform for communities and enterprises. Deki Wiki is an easy to use and sophisticated wiki for authoring, aggregating, organizing, and sharing content. Deki Wiki is also a platform for creating collaborative applications, or adding wiki capabilities to existing applications.
This is a very simple integration of Spring and FitNesse. FitnNesse is a Wiki-based framework to implement integration tests. Fit as well. This framework uses HTML files as input and output for the integration tests. Therefore the tests can be written using Word or Excel instead of a Wiki. This makes usage much easier and can be critical for success or failure.
This framework offers new classes that you can inherit from to implement or Fit FitNesse Fixtures. These Fixtures are then autowired to Spring Beans. So the Fixtures just need to implement set-methods. These are automatically called by Spring with a Spring Bean of the right type. This way Dependency Injection also covers the Fitnesse tests.
PmWiki is a wiki-based system for collaborative creation and maintenance of websites.
PmWiki pages look and act like normal web pages, except they have an "Edit" link that makes it easy to modify existing pages and add new pages into the website, using basic editing rules. You do not need to know or use any HTML or CSS. Page editing can be left open to the public or restricted to small groups of authors.
Streber is a free wiki driven project management tool written in php5. Freelancers and small teams can easily setup projects and keep track of tasks, issues, bugs, efforts etc. Project-User-Rights can be adjusted e.g. to provide clients a limited view of the current project state.
It supports very easy Installation with FTP.
Daisy is a content management system that offers rich out-of-the-box functionality combined with solid foundations for extensibility and integration. Daisy consists of two main components:
* a stand-alone repository server accessible through HTTP/XML (using the ReST style of WebServices) and/or a high-level (remote) Java API, and
* an extensive editing and publishing front-end web application running inside Apache Cocoon.
Due to its genericity and flexibility, Daisy can be used for many different purposes, but is ideally suited for information-rich, structured content and asset management applications. Even for advanced content management applications, Daisy can be used and configured without any Java-coding skills: Daisy offers a Javascript/Cocoon-based extension framework.