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What is WordPress and how does it work?

Posted: Wed Dec 18, 2024 8:40 am
by tasnimsanika1
If you don't know what WordPress is, I hope that in this simple guide you can understand not only what WordPress is , but also all its possibilities and how you can use it, as a hobby, at work or as an opportunity for personal and professional growth.

In this guide I'm going to get straight to the point, focusing on the main questions you may have about WordPress, so this is not intended to be a tutorial on everything you can do with WordPress and how to do it, it's not a step-by-step guide on how to do all kinds of things with WordPress, but rather a detailed introduction to everything it offers you.

At the end of the guide you will also find a series of resources and links in case you want to further expand your knowledge of WordPress and its possibilities, which are many.

But let’s start at the beginning…

What is WordPress?
WordPress
Simply put, WordPress is an application, a program, or whatever you want to call it, that is used to create websites and publish content on those websites.

This is also known as a CMS.

WordPress has been around since 2003 and has grown over the years from a simple blogging application to where you can now use WordPress for virtually any web application you can imagine.

Furthermore, it is important to highlight that WordPress is a dynamic content generation system, meaning that it can be easily updated, its publication can be scheduled, it allows multiple editing, etc.

And perhaps one of its greatest advantages is that you don't need to learn programming to publish web content with WordPress, it is ready to use, and anyone with basic knowledge of using text editing applications and browsers can use it and take full advantage of its possibilities.

On the other hand, it is important for you to know that WordPress is a completely online application, you do not have to install anything on your computer, if you have a browser, it does not matter the device, you can access with your credentials and create or modify content on your website.

If your company has a website, it is probably created with WordPress. In fact, you may already be using WordPress without knowing it, as it is so easy to use that it simply does not require specific training or learning courses in most cases.

If you worked with websites at school or university, it's also quite possible that you've also used WordPress without knowing it.

Your city hall website, or even your government website, is most likely built with WordPress.

WordPress is currently the application that powers more than 40% of the websites you see on a regular basis.

Some of the most well-known institutions and companies that use WordPress are:

White House (USA)
All embassy websites in the USA
NASA's website
Sony Music
Variety
BBC
TechCrunch
Congress of Deputies (Spain)
Rolling Stone
Pau Gasol
Rafa Nadal
Walt Disney
Renault Group
Bloomberg
CNN
Danone
MasterChef School
Ferrovial
Mercedes-Benz
MTV News
LinkedIn Official Blog
Time
Is WordPress just for blogging?
The list of well-known websites that use WordPress above should pretty much answer this question, but just in case there was any doubt: No, WordPress has long since ceased to be just for blogs.

With WordPress you can create any type of website and web application you can imagine, no matter what functionalities the website needs or what type of user it is intended for.

Despite this, you will still find so-called web development professionals who continue to maintain that WordPress is only for blogs, but that is mainly due to two reasons:

Lack of knowledge on their part of the progress that WordPress has netherlands whatsapp number data made over the last 15 years.
He doesn't know or master WordPress well, so he disregards those applications that he doesn't know in order to direct the client to those that he does know or master, even if they are of inferior quality or not suitable for the client's needs.
So if you hear or read that WordPress is only for blogs, that it's only good for blogs and little else, or even that WordPress isn't powerful enough for websites other than blogs, you already know that whoever says or writes that is someone who is not up to date when it comes to web technologies.

What is a CMS?
At the beginning, when describing WordPress, among other things, I told you that WordPress is a CMS, but I didn't explain it to you, and it is relevant to this whole debate about what WordPress is, but above all, what WordPress is used for.

Basically, a CMS is a content management system, as it is an abbreviation of the English Content Management System, which translated means just that, content management system, and refers to any application that allows you to create and manage content, usually in web environments.

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Until about 10 years ago, WordPress was not considered a complete CMS, because it lacked some of the basic features that any CMS worth its salt is supposed to have:

Design system independent of the content creation system.