Build your Community Forum with AI in under 5 minutes

Build a community forum with categories, threads, votes, moderation tools, and email digests — a Discourse-style board that lives on your own domain.

工作原理

步骤 1

描述您的想法

用纯文本提示描述您想要的内容。

步骤 2

AI 为您构建

FloopFloop 即时生成生产就绪的代码。

步骤 3

部署并上线

您的项目在几分钟内托管到专属子域名。

为什么选择 AI 构建而非雇佣开发者?

FloopFloop传统开发者
上线时间5 分钟以内2 至 8 周
费用低至 $0$5,000 - $50,000+
维护已包含持续外包费用

What is a community forum?

A community forum is the oldest durable shape of online community: categories hold threads, threads hold replies, and the whole thing is searchable years later. Discord and Slack ate the real-time conversation, but chat scrolls away — forums persist, which is why support communities, hobby groups, and product feedback still live in them, and why a busy forum quietly becomes an SEO asset. The hosted options each impose a constraint: Discourse self-hosting is real server administration, Circle prices per member as your community grows, and a Facebook Group means the audience — and the search traffic — belongs to Facebook. The hard part of running a forum was never the software; it's the cold start. Seed a dozen threads before opening the doors, answer fast in the first month, and let the weekly digest pull people back.

Common features

  • Categories with threaded discussions and replies
  • Markdown posts with image embeds
  • Upvotes, with new and top-this-week sorting
  • Pin, lock, move, and delete for moderators
  • Report queue, suspensions, and a moderation log
  • Email notifications for replies and @mentions
  • Weekly digest of top threads
  • Guest reading with member-only posting
  • Feature-request statuses — planned, in progress, shipped
  • Member profiles with post history

Real-world examples

SaaS support community

A product team moves repetitive support questions into a public forum. A year in, answered threads deflect tickets daily and rank for hundreds of long-tail product queries.

Hobby club board

A 400-member aquarium club replaces its Facebook Group. Build logs and species guides become permanent, searchable references instead of posts the algorithm buried.

Course community

An online-course creator runs a members-only Q&A board next to the lessons. Students answer each other between office hours, and the accepted-answer system surfaces what worked.

Why FloopFloop fits community forum projects

Forum software forces a choice between operating servers (Discourse), renting per member (Circle), or surrendering the audience (Facebook). A forum is also, structurally, one of the most classic database apps there is — which makes it a natural fit for describing in plain English and letting FloopFloop generate. You get the board with exactly your community's shape: your categories, your moderation rules, your digest cadence, statuses on feature requests if you're a product team, accepted answers if you're a course. Every public thread accrues search equity to your domain rather than a platform's, and the member list is a table you own — the asset that matters if the community ever needs to move.

试试这些提示词

复制以下任意提示词,粘贴到 FloopFloop 即可开始构建。

Build a community forum with categories, threaded discussions, sign-up and login, markdown posts with image embeds, upvotes, and a new/top-this-week sorting toggle. Moderators can pin, lock, and delete threads.

Create a product community with categories for announcements, help, and feature requests. Feature requests get an upvote button and a status label — planned, in progress, shipped — that only admins can change.

Design a Stack-Overflow-style Q&A board: questions with tags, answers sorted by votes, an accepted-answer checkmark controlled by the question author, and reputation points for upvoted answers. Include a weekly digest email of the top unanswered questions.

Build a private forum for a paid community: invite-only signup, a member directory, direct messages between members, and an admin dashboard with daily-active-members and posts-per-week charts.

常见问题

What moderation tools are included?
The working set every board needs: pin, lock, move, and delete threads; a report button that feeds a moderator queue; user suspensions and bans; and a moderation log so admins can see who did what. Communities die from unmoderated spam faster than from any feature gap, so this is the part to take seriously on day one.
How is spam kept out?
Layered friction: rate limits on posting, no links until an account has a few approved posts, a honeypot on signup, and a first-post approval queue for new members if you want it. The link restriction alone removes most drive-by SEO spam, which is the bulk of forum abuse.
Do members get notifications?
Email notifications on replies to your thread and @mentions, plus a weekly digest of top threads — the single best re-engagement tool a small community has. Notification preferences are per-member, because over-emailing is how forums end up in spam folders.
Is the forum good for SEO?
Public threads are the classic SEO engine: every question your community answers becomes an indexable page targeting a long-tail query, on your domain. It's how Stack Overflow and Reddit own search results. Private categories stay out of the index; public ones accumulate.
Can I migrate an existing community?
If you can export it, an importer can be built for it — ask for one that maps your Discourse or phpBB export into categories, threads, and posts, preserving authorship by matching email addresses. Members re-set passwords on first login; history arrives intact.
Can people read without an account?
Guest reading with member-only posting is the default that grows a community: public threads are shareable and indexable, and the join prompt appears exactly when someone has something to say. Fully private boards flip one setting.

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