List of wiki software

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Main article: Wiki software

This is a list of notable wiki software applications. For a list of Websites using wiki software, organized by topic, see List of wikis.

Contents

[edit] Java-based

  • Confluence (wiki) is a commercial J2EE application which combines Wiki and some blog functionality. Its features include PDF page export and page refactoring, and it can be run on any application server using any RDBMS backend.
  • Corendal Wiki is a GPL application for corporate environments, with tight integration with Active Directory.
  • JSPWiki is a J2EE application released under the LGPL.
  • SnipSnap is a Java-based package that combines Wiki and blog concepts. It includes its own web server, but can be built as a war file for use in other servlet engines. Released under the GNU General Public License
  • Traction TeamPage is a commercial application based on the principles of Douglas Engelbart's On-Line System (NLS) which aggregates multiple blog / Wiki spaces using a sophisticated permission and inline comment model.
  • XWiki is a Java wiki engine with a complete wiki feature set (version control, attachments, etc.) and a database engine and programming language which allows database driven applications to be created using the wiki interface.
  • LibreSource

[edit] JavaScript-based

[edit] Lisp-based

  • CLiki is a free collaborative hypertext authoring program written in Common Lisp. Modelled on Wiki, it is free software released under the MIT license. It presently runs in SBCL and requires Araneida which needs the SBCL socket library. Considered extremely powerful, it has been implemented at cliki.net, metacircles.com, and cliki.tunes.org

[edit] Windows-based

Windows-based wiki software uses a combination of ASP, VBScript, .NET, or C#.

[edit] Pascal-Based

[edit] Perl-based

While not strictly Wiki software, weblog-engine Blosxom mostly meets the definition when used with its wikieditish and wikiwordish plugins. There are also plugins available that enable Blosxom to use the text parsers from Kwiki, Twiki, or PurpleWiki.

[edit] PHP-based

Please note that many of Wikis below DO NOT support international characters - this is the case of WikkaWiki and other forks of Wakka, PhpWiki, easyWiki and others.

  • coWiki* follows the tradition of loose wikis with easy and intuitive markup, adding Unix-like access management, a directory/document hierarchy, and a plugin API for your functionalities and enhancements. All documents are parsed to XML for further export and transformation. coWiki is modular, template-based and multilingual. Uses MySQL. *As from December 2006, the coWiki project has died and is not available for download anymore.
  • GetWiki is a highly modified version of version 1.1.0 of MediaWiki
  • MediaWiki was custom-designed for the high-volume Wikipedia encyclopedia project; it is also used for all other projects run by the Wikimedia Foundation, which operates Wikipedia. It is written in PHP and uses a MySQL or PostgreSQL database backend; however it is publicly available and suitable for tailoring to other applications.
  • TigerWiki is a minimalist and simple wiki framework.
  • TikiWiki is one of the larger and more ambitious wiki development projects, including a variety of additional groupware features (message forums, articles, etc.).
  • DokuWiki is a simple-to-use Wiki aimed at the documentation needs of a small company. It uses plain text files and has a simple but powerful syntax which ensures the datafiles remain readable outside the Wiki.
  • PhpWiki is a WikiWikiWeb clone in PHP.
  • PmWiki is a PHP-based wiki. Features include: GPL-licensed, easy installation/customization, designed for collaborative authoring and maintenance of web sites, and support for Internationalization. Does not require a database.
  • PukiWiki is a PHP-based wiki (Japanese). Their site has not been fully translated into English.
  • RabbitWiki is a very simple PHP flat text based wiki. It has a small footprint but is prone to graffiti.
  • WakkaWiki is a PHP/MySQL-based lightweight wiki engine. Wakka is no longer maintained, but survives in a number of forks:
    • CitiWiki has been called the "Wiki of the next generation".
    • UniWakka is another fork of Wakka, aims at providing a collaborative authoring tool for scientific web content. It supports WikiFarms installations, MathML, footnotes, tables of contents, bibtex import and export, latex export, latex-like citations, OpenOffice export and more.
    • WackoWiki is a fork of Wakka, with many new features and multilingual interface. Shares several modules, developers and a bugtracker with an NPJ engine.
    • WikkaWiki is a light, standards-compliant, configurable fork of Wakka with many improvements and new features (among which native support for Mindmaps).
  • Wiclear is a simple PHP/MySQL-based lightweight wiki engine targeted at data organization and multiple languages. It also features customization via themes and extensibility via plugins.

[edit] Python-based

  • DavisWiki An elegant upgrade to the MoinMoin wiki. Developed by two UC Davis students.
  • MoinMoin is a Wiki clone written in Python. Offers good access control based on user groups.
  • OghamWiki is a WYSIWYG wiki designed for non technical users.
  • PikiPiki is a Python-based Wiki. It is fairly basic, quick and simple to install, and offers reasonable security.
  • PikiePikie another Python-based Wiki. It produces a Wiki that resembles a typical website, and allows visitors to choose which "skin" to view the site with.
  • TamTam
  • Trac is a Wiki clone that integrates simple issue tracking and an interface to Subversion.
  • Zwiki is a powerful Zope-based GPL wiki engine. It can integrate with the CMF content management framework and Plone, and supports several kinds of markup as well as WYSIWYG HTML editing.

[edit] Ruby-based

  • Instiki is a Wiki clone written in Ruby.
  • Pimki is a PIM (Personal Information Manager) loosely based on Instiki's Wiki technology.
  • Ruwiki is a simple, extensible Wiki, supporting CGI and WEBrick interfaces, templates, CSS formatting, namespaces, and internationalisation.
  • Hiki is another Wiki clone written in Ruby, originating in Japan.

[edit] Squeak (Smalltalk) -based

  • Swiki is written in Squeak, and considered to be "super-portable and easy to set up and use". It runs on common platforms, including Mac, Windows, *nix, as well as others.
  • SmallWiki is a wiki for Squeak, and version 2 (called "Pier") is being written for Seaside, a web-design framework similar to Rails.

[edit] Personal

Main article: Personal wiki

[edit] Peer-To-Peer

[edit] PDA

  • AcroWiki is a commercial editing application with wiki-like syntax for PalmOS. It stores the notes as Memos (in a separate category) so they can be opened on the desktop machines and exported to an online wiki.

[edit] Miscellaneous

  • Apple's HyperCard was a direct inspiration for Ward Cunningham's original Wiki software.
  • Techwiki claims to be a Wiki optimized for writing technical stuff - mathematics, equations and the like.
  • WikiServer is a self-contained, easy-to-install wiki written in C++. The current stable release of the latest version runs on Windows and Linux.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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