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Hello JoomlaShine fellows,
This month, the first AVG distributor website in Italy is our fantastic show case of JSN Gruve.[1] Let’s have a glance at the company overview and hear Andrea Orsucci – the CTO and coordinator of the most important Italian AVG distributor – express his thoughts about our JoomlaShine templates.
Hi, I am Andrea Orsucci – the CTO and coordinator of the most important Italian AVG distributor. Our site, which was created and is maintained by our technical staff, is designed with clearness and simplicity in mind, and combines static parts with our own designs for integrated features, such as support, the shopping area, and reseller tools.
We choose JSN Gruve[2] for many reasons. First, our old website was managed by a third party web agency, hence, we wanted to choose another template which has a similar interface but includes more layout positions and modules, as well as good documentation and support.
Luckily, using JSN GRUVE made possibility to easily create a nice appearance and to let our technical staff concentrate on "what to create under the hood" with powerful tools and procedures, perfectly integrated into template/website
The best aspect is the "free of charge" migration to a responsive design due to the underlying good Bootstrap Framework.
JSN PowerAdmin[4] is another great component for everyday work.
Good, with prompt and dedicated support, with reasonable answers.
Our site is an interesting mix of JSN template, 3rd party components and custom-developed code.
Everything is working flawlessly so far, and even our custom code was perfectly embedded in the template, with great satisfaction about the user experience of end users, resellers, and the internal team too.
JoomlaShine provides very good level templates and frequently releases new ones each month. We even got some new ideas by taking inspiration from the most recently released templates. Great job, guys. I hope JoomlaShine will get more success in the future!
Scott Sauyet sent in Why Ramda?, a post that attempts to explain the Ramda library:
To those not used to functional programming, Ramda seems to serve no purpose whatsoever. Most of its major capabilities are already covered by libraries like Underscore and LoDash.
These folks are right. If you want to keep coding with the same imperative and object-oriented styles you’ve been using, Ramda does not have much to offer you.
However, it does offer a different style of coding, a style that’s taken for granted in purely functional programming languages: Ramda makes it simple for you to build complex logic through functional composition. Note that any library with a compose function will allow you do functional composition; the real point here is: “makes it simple”.
The article builds on the functional composition idea and leads up to the kind of data-focused programming that Ramda makes possible.
Two-Way Data Binding by Nikita Vasilyev is a review of two-way data binding in Backbone, React, Angular, Meteor and plain JavaScript.
It highlights an issue that some libraries might have if they change fields at the wrong time:
The problem is that data flows from an input field to a model, and then back to the same input field, overriding the current value even if it’s exactly the same.
React.js doesn’t have Backbone’s problem with moving the cursor position. Its virtual DOM, a layer between the actual DOM and React’s state, prevents React from unnecessary DOM changes.
There’s also an informative comment by Leo Horie about the effort required to learn each framework:
Something that strikes me about the framework versions is the amount of framework-specific knowledge required to get these examples working. It’s one thing to say “here’s a version in framework X”, and it’s quite another to actually write the code (from the standpoint of someone who’s still considering framework options and who is not familiar with the lingo and caveats for any of them.)
Read more https://feedproxy.google.com/~r/dailyjs/~3/_SbkZ7gKrw4/ramda-two-way
Read more https://feeds.joomla.org/~r/JoomlaExtensions/~3/iF_36cz26hg/27407
The Joomla! Project and the Production Leadership Team are proud to announce the release of Joomla! 3.3.1. This is a maintenance release for the 3.x series of the Joomla! CMS.
If you are currently running a Joomla! release on a server with PHP 5.3.10 or later, we encourage you to update immediately to Joomla! 3.3.1 via either the one-click update or the update downloads available at https://www.joomla.org/download.html.
Note that in order to update directly to 3.3.1 via the core update component, you must be running 3.2.2 or later due to the raised minimum supported PHP version and the update system not supporting checking the server’s PHP version in older releases. Older 3.x releases will be prompted to update to 3.2.4 before being presented the 3.3.1 update....
Read more https://feeds.joomla.org/~r/JoomlaAnnouncements/~3/803XlhG3Q6k/5551-joomla-3-3-1-released.html
The Joomla Project is pleased to announce the immediate availability of Joomla 2.5.21. This is a maintenance release for the 2.5 series of the Joomla! CMS.
The update process is very simple, and complete instructions are available here. Note that there are now easier and better ways of updating than copying the files with FTP.
Note: Please read the update instructions before updating.
*Please clear your browser's cache after upgrading
Want to test drive Joomla? Try the online demo. Documentation is available for beginners.
Check the Joomla 2.5.21 Post-Release FAQs to see if there are important items and helpful hints discovered after the release.
See https://developer.joomla.org/version-2-5-21-release-notes.html for details of the tracker items fixed.
There are a variety of ways in which you can get actively involved with Joomla! It doesn't matter if you are a coder, an integrator, or merely a user of Joomla!. You can contact the Joomla! Community Development Manager,
The Joomla! Bug Squad is one of the most active teams in the Joomla! development process and is always looking for people (not just developers) that can help with sorting bug reports, coding patches and testing solutions. It’s a great way for increasing your working knowledge of Joomla!, and also a great way to meet new people from all around the world.
If you are interested, please read about us on the Joomla! Documentation Wiki and, if you wish to join, email
You can also help Joomla! development by thanking those involved in the many areas of the process. In the past year, for example, over 1,000 bugs have been fixed by the Bug Squad.
Thank you to the code contributors and active Bug Squad members that created and tested this release:
Abd Al-Mageed Suckar, Achal Aggarwal, Angel Toribio, Bastian W, Ben Tasker, Benjamin Trenkle, Bernard Saulme, Brian Teeman, Camden Narzt, Christiane Maier-Stadtherr, Chris Davenport, Christopher Masters, Daniel Sloof, David Jardin, Dennis Hermacki, Edwin Cheront, Elijah Madden, Florian Dal Fitto, George Wilson, Hannes Papenberg, Hans Kuijpers, Håvard Kristoffersen, Izhar Aazmi, Jean-Marie Simonet, Jelle Kok, Jisse Reitsma, Juelis Junior, Jurian Even, Klas Berlič, Kristijan Zivcec, Leo Lammerink, Marcel van Beelen, Marco Richter, Matt Thomas, Michael Babker, Nha Bui, Nicholas Dionysopoulos, Nick Savov, Niels van der Veer, Ove Eriksson, Ozan Ozkan, Patrick Alt, Peter Lose, Peter van Westen, Peter Wiseman, Piotr Mocko, Pruteanu Alexandru, Richard McDaniel, Robert Deutz, Roberto Segura, Roelf Pringle, Roland Dalmulder, Sebastien Heraud, Sergey Gribinichenko, Sergio Manzi, Seyi Awofadeju, Simon Asika, Stefania Gaianigo, Stefano Storti, Thomas Hunziker, Thomas Jackson, Tobias Zulauf, Todor Iliev, Valentin Despa, Viktor Vogel.
Thank you to the Joomla! Bug Squad for their dedicated efforts investigating reports, fixing problems, and applying patches to Joomla. If you find a bug in Joomla!, please report it on the Joomla! CMS Issue Tracker.
Active members of the Joomla! Bug Squad during past 3 months include: Achal Aggarwal, Andrea Zagli, Anibal Sanchez, Beat , Benjamin Trenkle, Brad Markle, Brian Teeman, Chris Davenport, Christiane Maier-Stadtherr, Dan Walker, David Jardin, Demis Palma, Dennis Hermacki, Dimitris Grammatikos, Elijah Madden, George Wilson, Hans Kuijpers, Hugo Avila, Itamar Elharar, Jean-Marie Simonet, jelle kok, Jurian Even, Lara Petersen, Leo Lammerink, Marc Antoine Thevenet, Marcel van Beelen, Marco Richter, Matt Thomas, Michael Babker, Mikhail M, Mohamed Infaz, Nick Savov, Niels van der Veer, Peter Lose, Peter Martin, Peter Wiseman, Piotr Mocko, Robert Gastaud, Roberto Segura, Roland Dalmulder, Sander Potjer, Sergio Manzi, Stefania Gaianigo, Thomas Hunziker, Thomas Jackson, Tobias Zulauf, Todor Iliev, Tom Hutchison, Valentin Despa, Viktor Vogel.
Bug Squad Leadership: Mark Dexter and Nick Savov, Co-Coordinators.
A big thanks to the Joomla! Security Strike Team for their ongoing work to keep Joomla! secure. Members include: Airton Torres, Alan Langford, Beat, Bill Richardson, Claire Mandville, David Hurley, Don Gilbert, Gary Brooks, Jason Kendall, Javier Gomez, Jean-Marie Simonet, Marijke Stuivenberg, Mark Boos, Mark Dexter, Matias Griese, Michael Babker, Nick Savov, Pushapraj Sharma, Roberto Segura, Rouven Weßling, Thomas Hunziker....
Read more https://feeds.joomla.org/~r/JoomlaAnnouncements/~3/HEp3DrKDIB8/5550-joomla-2-5-21-released.html
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