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Posted by Victory on 01/08/08 01:02
To add to this :
The host has a bunch of different templates for the blog (wordpress),
I don't know if that makes a difference or not when I "parse" it.
On Jan 7, 7:59 pm, Victory <bionicbud...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Ok, thanks for that quick reply.
> I am not sure what 'parse' means, so please help me out.
> I am just creating a run-of-the-mill html web page. I paid someone to
> build it, so that is why I am not willing to change it at this point
> because of the cost involved. I just want to insert it into a column
> or table within the webpage. Is that enough information? What more
> do you need to show me the way?
>
> Thanks again.
>
> On Jan 7, 7:49 pm, David Dorward <dorw...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > On Jan 8, 12:41 am, Victory <bionicbud...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > > I talked to my hosting company which has Wordpress and they told me
> > > that it is a standalone system, whereas I can't 'cut and paste' the
> > > code and put it into an already designed webpage. The reasons I want
> > > to go through route are many and decided upon previously. So if
> > > wordpress won't accomplish this, is there another program that will?
>
> > WordPress can accomplish that, there are two approaches.
>
> > (1) Turn the problem upside down. Put the rest of the content into the
> > WordPress template.
>
> > (2) Parse the ATOM feed generated by WordPress and insert it into your
> > page. The specifics would depend on how you were building the page
> > already.
>
> > --
> > David Dorwardhttp://dorward.me.uk/http://blog.dorward.me.uk/
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