WikkaWiki


Native mind map support in WikkaWiki
Original author(s) Jason Tourtelotte
Developer(s) Wikka Development Team
Initial release May 29, 2004 (2004-05-29)
Stable release [1] / October 2, 2011; 4 months ago (2011-10-02)
Preview release 1.4 (current) / nightly
Operating system Cross-platform
Type Wiki
License GNU General Public License
Website http://wikkawiki.org
For the neopagan religion and religious movement, see Wicca.

WikkaWiki (often shortened as Wikka) is a free, lightweight, and standards-compliant wiki engine. Written in PHP, it uses MySQL to store pages. WikkaWiki is a fork of Wakka Wiki to which a number of new features have been added. It is designed for speed, fine-grained access control, extensibility, and security, and is released under the GNU General Public License.

Contents

History

In 2003, the development of Wakka Wiki came abruptly to an end, although a large community of users and contributors was still posting bugfixes, extensions, and new functions. First released in May 2004 by Jason Tourtelotte, WikkaWiki rapidly grew into a project aiming to remain faithful to Wakka's heritage of a lightweight engine with readable and accessible code. It was the first wiki engine to introduce mindmapping support allowing users to collaboratively edit mindmaps via wiki pages,[1][2] a feature largely adopted by the majority of other wikis thereafter.

Wikka vision

Compared to heavier wiki engines, which integrate several built-in functions, WikkaWiki's goal is to keep its core as small as possible while developing an architecture that supports easy extensibility through plugin modules. Wikka's backend is based on a MySQL relational database, which makes it fast, reliable and more scalable than wiki engines based on flat text storage.[3]

The latest version 1.3.1 was released on 31 Mar 2011.[4] This release is a major feature release introducing substantial new functionality as well as security patches and several bug fixes.

Wikka features

Among the distinctive features of this wiki engine:

  • RSS feeds for recent modifications and page revisions (with autodiscovery)
  • WikiPing client functionality, allowing page changes to be broadcast and tracked on a remote WikiPing server

Documentation

A dedicated server provides extensive documentation and tutorials, targeted at different categories of users, from the end user to the developer.[5]

See also

References

  1. ^ "WikkaWiki 1.1.5.0 release notes". 2004-09-02. http://docs.wikkawiki.org/WikkaReleaseNotes1150. Retrieved 2009-08-08. 
  2. ^ Armstrong, Sara (2008). Information Literacy: Navigating & Evaluating Today's Media. Shell Education. pp. 99. ISBN 1425805548. http://books.google.com/?id=WvWeB7E2bN8C. Retrieved 2009-08-08. 
  3. ^ Wieduwilt, Frank (December 2006). "Quickie wikis: Lightweight wikis without databases" (PDF). Linux Magazine (73): 30–33. http://www.linux-magazine.com/w3/issue/73/Leightweight_Wikis.pdfe.com/. Retrieved 2009-09-03. 
  4. ^ Wikka Developer Blog, Wikka 1.3.1 release, http://blog.wikkawiki.org/2011/04/23/wikka-1-3-1-released/
  5. ^ Wikka Documentation, http://docs.wikkawiki.org

External links