I admit that I haven't really looked at Drupal 8 too much yet. There is a variety of reasons why I haven't and I surely don't want this to turn into a forum listing the pros and cons of D8. We can leave that for another post.
A question on the PSU DUG Slack channel got me thinking. How is it that websites are still being constructed at Penn State without any thought being put in as to how its is going to be maintained? Or by whom?
It’s been a few months since I first mentioned the Git Book module here on DPE. I haven’t done much with it since but was able to scrape together a rather epic sprint today.
This is a Video post that shows how easy it is to whip up ELMSLN on an EC2 instance. Please at least use a t2.small instance as ELMSLN requires 2GB of memory for mysql of it's processing during automation.
Using drupal_static() on your helper functions is a great habit to get into when developing your modules. Drupal static ensures that your function will only run through its logic once during the bootstrap process.
I admit that I haven't really looked at Drupal 8 too much yet. There is a variety of reasons why I haven't and I surely don't want this to turn into a forum listing the pros and cons of D8. We can leave that for another post.
A question on the PSU DUG Slack channel got me thinking. How is it that websites are still being constructed at Penn State without any thought being put in as to how its is going to be maintained? Or by whom?
It’s been a few months since I first mentioned the Git Book module here on DPE. I haven’t done much with it since but was able to scrape together a rather epic sprint today.
This is a Video post that shows how easy it is to whip up ELMSLN on an EC2 instance. Please at least use a t2.small instance as ELMSLN requires 2GB of memory for mysql of it's processing during automation.
Using drupal_static() on your helper functions is a great habit to get into when developing your modules. Drupal static ensures that your function will only run through its logic once during the bootstrap process.