Sorry for the incomplete first response. Here's the 3 typos I found
below, spaced type to alert your eye.
http://plone.org/documentation/manual/plone-3-user-manual/referencemanual-all-pages 3.2. Editing Content
Editing Plone . . .
Change or add text and s a m e , and the normal view is back. This
is considerably quicker -- fewer clicks and intervening wait time --
than clicking the Edit tab and bringing up the entire edit panel for
the page.
4.3. Collection Connections
With collections you can explore the real flexibility that a content
management system like Plone offers.
You've seen how collections provide a way to augment an organization
of content, with overlapping or overarching additional collections
that key on date, or specific fields, or text searches. There is a
deeper meaning to this, which gets to something called metadata, or
"data about data," introduced in the section on Setting Basic
Properties. Content management systems have this metadata, a kind of
low-level intelligence, built into them. Plone incorporates the
Dublin Core metadata element set, which was devised in Dublin, Ohio in
1995 at a library conference (Librarians are o n the ones really
on top of information, you know).
5.4. Collaboration through Sharing
The Sharing tab empowers you collaborate with other users through the
use of several built-in roles.
Example 1: Letting others add content to a folder you created.
In this example, Jane Smythe has full access to her Plone site. She
can add, edit, delete and publish content anywhere in the site. For
now, she has created a folder called "Documentation" and added one
Page to it, "Project Overview". She hasn't published either the folder
or the document. The default workflow for this Plone site has not been
modified.
Now she wants to let her colleague, George Shrubb, add content to the
Documentation folder. He h a v e permission to edit
On Sep 7, 12:45 pm, darcihanning <
[hidden email]> wrote:
> After several months of work, overseen by Jeff Pittman (geojeff) and with
> the assistance of many many folks (see below) I'm very excited to share that
> the two new user's manuals have been published:
>
>
http://plone.org/documentation/manual/plone-3-user-manual>
>
http://plone.org/documentation/manual/plone-2.5-user-manual>
> Both of these manuals have evolved from various sources (includinghttp://learnplone.org/) and contributors: JoAnna Springsteen, Martin Aspeli,
> Jon Baldivieso, Andrew Burkhalter, Sam Knox, Jon Stahl, Jeff Pittman, Esther
> Schindler, Rob Stevenson, Veda Williams, Donna Snow (and me). (If I've
> missed anyone, please please let me know!)
>
> If you have feedback or suggestions, post them to the documentation list
> (
http://www.nabble.com/Documentation-Team-f6744.html) or at the tracker:
http://plone.org/development/teams/documentation/documentation-tracker>
> Cheers!
> Darci Hanning
> --
> View this message in context:
http://www.nabble.com/New-User%27s-Manuals-Published%21-tf4402858s674...
> Sent from the General Questions mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
>
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