If you are working on a website redesign, 404s are the very real monsters under your bed. Ignore them, and they will wreak havoc on your website’s traffic. Worst of all, by the time you realize what’s happening it may already be too late.
If you are working on a website redesign, 404s are the very real monsters under your bed. Ignore them, and they will wreak havoc on your website’s traffic. Worst of all, by the time you realize what’s happening it may already be too late.
Recently, I needed to add some dynamic content to a Views footer. Specifically, I needed to change a link in the Views footer based on the current path, which isn’t an option from the Views UI.
In case you've had trouble tracking it down (I did), the approach to caching custom blocks is different in Drupal 8 than in Drupal 7. In Drupal 8 all renderable arrays are cacheable – including, of course, those returned by custom blocks.
Our client, Human Rights Watch, publishes a large volume of content and with the redevelopment of HRW.org, they wanted a way to curate their content in more meaningful ways.
If you are working on a website redesign, 404s are the very real monsters under your bed. Ignore them, and they will wreak havoc on your website’s traffic. Worst of all, by the time you realize what’s happening it may already be too late.
If you are working on a website redesign, 404s are the very real monsters under your bed. Ignore them, and they will wreak havoc on your website’s traffic. Worst of all, by the time you realize what’s happening it may already be too late.
Recently, I needed to add some dynamic content to a Views footer. Specifically, I needed to change a link in the Views footer based on the current path, which isn’t an option from the Views UI.
In case you've had trouble tracking it down (I did), the approach to caching custom blocks is different in Drupal 8 than in Drupal 7. In Drupal 8 all renderable arrays are cacheable – including, of course, those returned by custom blocks.
Our client, Human Rights Watch, publishes a large volume of content and with the redevelopment of HRW.org, they wanted a way to curate their content in more meaningful ways.