I wish I could say that my switch to the first “stable” release of Textpattern was seamless and glitch-free. It wasn’t.
Upon upgrading and logging into the Admin panel to run the update script, I was greeted with a cascade of PHP errors. Actually, it was one error repeated ad nauseum. It took me a minute to figure out how to clear it from my screen (it was a language setting issue), but a novice user would have probably quit right there. Maybe it was an issue with upgrading, and not entirely TXP’s fault. Maybe I wouldn’t have had the problem if I had been keeping up with the release candidates, but I wasn’t. I came straight from 1.0rc1.
My date format was all jacked up as well (oh yeah, the technical jargon is straight flowin’ today!). I had to fumble around until I found a setting under Admin/Site Preferences that move the site from a “Test” to “Production” environment. Then dates worked fine. Undocumented procedures have been Textpattern’s Achilles Heel, and I had hoped for concise upgrade instructions. Alas, there is still quite a bit of the ol’ DIY ethic present in TXP.
I had to update a couple of my plugins, but once I’d done that everything fell into place rather nicely. That is to say, nothing exploded. My site didn’t die.
I’m still working out some of the bugs (oh, yes, there are bugs) and figuring out how to re-hack some of my favorite mods into the site. There seem to be some CSS problems in the Admin panel but I can tidy that up on my own now, can’t I? My advice: if you feel confident working out issues with Textpattern, upgrade away! If you’re a novice user, wait. There are bugs to work out first.
Short list of things to do:
If you notice anything else out of place, let me know. But just so you know, the pink color that is all over these pages is actually supposed to be there. ;)
So is Textpattern worth it? Uh huh! Despite the small headaches, it’s still the easiest CMS I’ve had the pleasure of working with. While the upgrade was a bit rough, perhaps the clean install is still as smooth as butter. At any rate, documentation and process cleanup can only get better, right?
You’re a little tenacious, Textpattern, but I still love you.
Jared Christensen » 1155 days ago #
Thanks, Sam. I’ll check out that plugin.Michael Heilemann » 1154 days ago #
I’m getting [#] where # is the number of comments, added to entry headlines in your RSS feed. This makes it update every time someone leaves a comment, and it is really annoying :(Matthew Pennell » 1154 days ago #
Aargh, stupid tabindex problem in the comment form is still there then… grrrJared Christensen » 1154 days ago #
Michael – Thanks for the heads up. It’s on my “urgent” list of items to fix…Nathan Smith » 1154 days ago #
I’m still running TXP rc1, and will be switching to 4.0 soon. I’m also moving from 1and1 to Dreamhost, so if anyone has experience importing SQL databases, give me a hollar. I agree, Textpattern is a bit quirky, but I love it. :)Thomas Stache » 1148 days ago #
Forget about admin_config.php, all these (feed) settings are now in the interface at Prefs->Advanced Prefs.You're reading an entry from my Weblogue. My most recent writing is on the Weblogue landing page, and a full listing of all my writing is available in the Archives.