Projects tagged ‘hierarchy’


[14 total ]

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LinkLens is a new approach to information management that provides an intuitive mix of tagging and folder hierarchies. LinkLens is built in ruby on rails. LinkLens allows a user to search the sets of ... [More] associations between different artifacts such as users, resources, files, discussions and so on. In the web interface all artifacts can be dragged and dropped into a context box and the set of artifacts associated with the those in the context box are then displayed. The contents of the context box form a location, so other artifacts can then be dragged and dropped into the results pane which causes them to acquire associations with the current context artifacts. New artifacts created will be placed in this location, since they will automatically acquire associations with everything in the context. This creates a sense of location associated with a set of artifacts and this serves as an alternative to locations defined by structured hierachies. The LinkLens system has been fast prototyped in Ruby on Rails and makes extensive use of Ruby on Rails AJAX support. [Less]
Created about 1 year ago.

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Analytic Hierarchy Process
Created 4 months ago.

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Templation is a template framework for content-based websites. Unlike RAD environments and MVC frameworks which are all the rage these days, Templation operates under a much simpler content-oriented ... [More] paradigm--the traditional HTML file in a web server directory. Although it is written (and extensible) in PHP, Templation is essentially a nuts and bolts HTML tool. The core idea was to provide a more flexible way to remove repetitive code from HTML sites. Rather than a rigid templating system like Dreamweaver templates, or a brittle system of SSI or PHP includes, or an application-oriented framework, Templation operates on two incredibly simple but profound ideas. 1. It's more natural for a site to be defined by one or more templates which have content areas that are 'filled in' by individual pages, rather than have individual pages be responsible for calling in headers and footers and other shared elements. 2. The directory structure of a site holds a lot of implicit information about the site. For instance, all the html files in a given directory tend to be more alike and share more common elements than html files found in different directories. By creating hooks to control the construction of HTML documents based on the directories they are in, we can almost completely remove HTML redundancy from any site without sacrificing flexibility. Templation was developed to solve real-world problems rather than based on a grand vision. As a result it's unlike anything else out there. Give it a try and let me know what you think. [Less]
Created 12 months ago.

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Organizational Chart Web Part for MOSS
Created 10 months ago.