What is Wordpress

WordPress is an amazing (and free!) bundle of programming that sits behind the scenes on your web worker (the distant PC where your space is facilitated) and plays out all the specialized handling that conveys your substance to your guest on their neighborhood PC. When WordPress is introduced on your domain you don't have to effectively make it work. It simply stays there and plays out its enchantment altogether in the background. 




WordPress gives a WYSIWYG ('what you see is what you get') interface to you, the website admin, that sidesteps the need to know any HTML, PHP, CSS, JavaScript, MySQL or some other coding language. When the joint of specialists and bloggers, WordPress has now developed into an amazing furthermore, complex web stage that upholds a large group of highlights both for proficient and DIY webmaster..


The terms 'blog' and 'site' are presently adequately equivalent to the extent our use of WordPress is concerned. Savants utilize the two terms conversely in light of the fact that the innovation stage behind both is by and large something similar. 


WordPress is currently really utilized by a portion of the significant players on the Internet as a total Content Management System (CMS). Think CNN, The New York Times, About.com, the White House, US Post Office, and Ford Motors - they all utilize WordPress. 

Furthermore, not withstanding the specialists, a great many customary individuals and private companies around the world likewise use WordPress as their foundation of decision to get a presence on the web.

What's so uncommon about WordPress? 


WordPress is FREE and open-source

WordPress is steady and kept up by a multitude of specialists 

WordPress contains various in the background includes that make making your own site a breeze 


WordPress is brilliant, however it has gained notoriety for being troublesome. This is, to some extent, due to the documentation.


WordPress was initially composed by software engineers, for developers, and the directions ('codex', as it's named) are frequently written in tech-talk and appear to expect that you know.