This is a list of wiki software programs. They are grouped by use case: standard wiki programs, personal wiki programs, hosted-only wikis, wiki-based content management software, and wiki-based project management software. They are further subdivided by the language of implementation: JavaScript, Java,PHP, Python,Perl,Ruby, and so on.
TiddlyWiki is aHTML-JavaScript-based server-less wiki in which the entire site/wiki is contained in a single file, or as aNode.js-based wiki application. It is designed for maximum customization possibilities.[1]
XWiki is a free wiki software platform written in Java with a design emphasis on extensibility.[2] XWiki is an enterprise wiki engine with a complete wiki feature set (version control, attachments, etc.) and adatabase engine and programming language which allowsdatabase driven applications to be created using the wiki interface.
ikiwiki, a "wiki compiler" - can useSubversion or git as the back end storage mechanism. ikiwiki converts wiki pages into HTML pages suitable for publishing on a website.
TWiki is a flexible, powerful, secure, simpleEnterprise wiki and application platform. is a structured wiki, typically used to run a project development space, a document management system, aknowledge base, or any othergroupware tool. Also available as aVMware appliance.
BookStack is released under theMIT License. It uses the ideas of books to organize pages and store information.
DokuWiki is a wiki application licensed underGPLv2 and written in PHP. It is aimed at the documentation needs of a small company. DokuWiki was built for smallcompanies andorganizations that need a simple way to manage information, build knowledge bases and collaborate. It uses plain text files and has a simple but powerful syntax which ensures the datafiles remain readable outside the wiki.
MediaWiki is a free and open-source wiki software package written in PHP. It serves as the platform forWikipedia and the other Wikimedia projects run by theWikimedia Foundation. It is also publicly available for use in other wikis, and has widespread popularity among smaller, non-Wikimedia wikis. MediaWiki is a free and open-source wiki software. It was developed for use on Wikipedia in 2002, and given the name "MediaWiki" in 2003.
Semantic MediaWiki lets you store and query data within the wiki's pages like a database. It is also designed to ease and combine collaborative authoring within a wiki withsemantic technology.
BlueSpice extends MediaWiki in usability, quality management, process support, administration, editing and security.
MindTouch is an application that began as afork of MediaWiki; it has aC# back-end and a PHP front-end.
PmWiki is a PHP-based wiki. Features include: GPL-licensed, easy installation/customization, designed for collaborative authoring and maintenance of web sites, and support forinternationalization. Does not require a database.
LocalWiki is a wiki engine based onDjango, with mapping features and a WYSIWYG editor. The LocalWiki project was founded byDavisWiki creators Mike Ivanov and Philip Neustrom and is a501 nonprofit organization based in San Francisco.
There are also wiki applications designed for personal use,[3] apps for mobile use,[4] and apps for use fromUSB flash drives.[5] They often include more features than traditional wikis, including:
Dynamic tree views of the wiki
Drag-and-drop support for images, text and video, mathematics
Use ofOLE or Linkback to allow wikis to act as relational superstructures for multiple desktop-type documents
Multimedia embedding, with links to internal aspects of movies, soundtracks, notes and comments
Macros and macro scripting
A list of such software:
Joplin, an open-source note-taking app that uses markdown.
Microsoft OneNote, note taking software with a structure of notebooks, sections, and pages that can include fonts, media, links to other notes, and hyperlinks.
Obsidian is a knowledge base and note-taking software application that operates on Markdown files.
ConnectedText was acommercial Windows-based personal wiki system with features includingfull text searches,visual link tree, customizable interface, image and file control, CSS-based page display, exports to HTML and HTML Help, and plug-ins.
Journler was a free, open-source personal information manager with personal wiki features for OS X.
MyInfo is a commercial, Windows-based personal information manager with wiki features.
TiddlyWiki is a free, open-source personal use (single-machine) wiki based on HTML/JavaScript for any browser and OS. It supports customization and a wide range of add-ons.
Vimwiki is a personal wiki for the text editorVim. It operates on interlinked, plain text files written in one of several markup languages and provides features such as HTML export, search, outlined notes and tasks, tagging and auto-formatted tables.
WhizFolders was a commercial Windows-based personal wiki software with rich text wiki items that support inserting links to other wiki items or external files.
Zim is a free, open-source standalone wiki based on Python and GTK with a WYSIWYG editor.
Elium (previously Knowledge Plaza[6]) is a knowledge management tool that provides both wiki environments for collaborative topic/project work and anenterprise bookmarking tool.
Content management and social software with wiki functionality
Confluence is a commercial J2EE application which combines wiki and someblog functionality. Its features include PDF page export and page refactoring, and it can be run on any application server using any RDBMS backend.
Jive (formerly known as Clearspace, Jive SBS and Jive Engage) is a commercial J2EE application, made byJive Software, which combines wiki, blog and document management functionality. Jive uses WYSIWYG editing, and includes workflow management.
Liferay is an open source enterprise portal project with a built-in web content management and web application framework. Core portlets offer a great number of functionalities, including Wiki (both Creole and MediaWiki syntax).
Mindquarry creates a WYSIWYG wiki for each team. It is built usingApache Cocoon and thus based on Java (Mozilla Public License)
Traction TeamPage is a commercial enterprise wiki also incorporating blog, project management, document management, discussion and tagging capabilities. The wiki has a draft moderation capability allowing administrators to indicate who can read published vs. draft versions, and who can publish vs. author and edit. The dynamic view architecture allows for easy organization of pages and to collect any set of pages for view, email or export. It is based on the principles ofDouglas Engelbart'sOn-Line System (NLS) which aggregates multiple blog/wiki spaces using a sophisticated permission and inline comment model.
XWiki includes the standard wiki functionality as well as WYSIWYG editing,OpenDocument based document import/export, semantic annotations and tagging, and advanced permissions management.
Socialtext is a company based in Palo Alto, California, that produces enterprisesocial software, enterprise wiki andweblog engine partially derived from open-source Kwiki. Socialtext is available as a hosted service, or a dedicated hardware appliance.
Drupal installations can be configured as wikis with MediaWiki-stylewiki markup.
Tiki Wiki CMS Groupware is one of the larger and more ambitious wiki development projects, including a variety of additionalgroupware features (message forums, articles, etc.).
Telligent, A Verint Company is an enterprise collaboration and community software business founded in 2004 by Rob Howard. The company changed its name to Zimbra, Inc in September 2013 after completing the acquisition of Zimbra fromVMWare. In August 2015 Zimbra's Telligent business was acquired byVerint Systems.
Project management software with wiki functionality