Publishing Content with COR
Modified on 2009/09/06 14:33 by Charles — Categorized as: Website Design
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Publishing Content with COR
Roles and the Web Part
A Typical Example
Publishing Content with COR
¶
The
Rich Text Viewer Web Part
is designed to save draft views of the content. A COR Administrator with a Publisher Role is allowed to review and then Publish the draft content.
Roles and the Web Part
¶
COR Administrators login to gain access to the system. They have Roles that identify content that they are allowed to view, edit, and publish.
A Typical Example
¶
A typical usage may include:
A website has a number of pages, three of the pages are defined such that Marketing can edit the pages. There is also a section of the home page that is edited by Marketing.
The pages of the website are protected by the
COR Role Permissions Web Part
that is added to every page.
The home page protects its content for every Web Part by editing the Edit Permissions in the
COR Common Features
portion of the Web Part.
Marketing has Content Editors and Content Publishers.
Jane is a Marketing Content Editor. She has a Role of 'Marketing Content Editor' that allows her to edit content in the Marketing pages and the home page. As an editor, her content changes are not visible to Users.
Sarah is a Marketing Content Publisher. She has a Role of 'Marketing Content Publisher'. She reviews the content on the Marketing pages that has edited and when satisfied publishes it for all User to see.