Articles from Mediacurrent

Primary tabs

Today, the Drupal community has officially released the first release candidate of Drupal 8, with the final release imminent.

While still a slightly slow month, September saw a slight increase in our contribution efforts over August.

Client sponsored

We were very pleased to have several clients look to make improvements in modules their sites use:

I recently inherited a Drupal 7 theme that did not use CSS preprocessors like Sass or Less. While the CSS files were clearly organized, they contained more than 15,000 lines of code which made maintainability a difficult task.

To the Drupal developers getting started with Symfony, there's a whole new set of vocabulary words we need to learn.

This episode we prattle on for quite some time. We go over the results from The Weekly Drop’s customer survey, talk about multi-site Drupal and the Paragraph and Inline Entity Form modules in the Pro Project Pick.

We all have been in situations when there are crazy crunch times before a release. Folks are working long, hard hours. Frequent last minute builds are done to fix issues and put in functionality. New bugs are then found.

When you ask people, “What makes Drupal different?” you can expect a variety of answers. Many people are likely to point to its flexibility. The technically-minded might reference Drupal’s hook system or Entity API.

With many members of staff on vacation for part of the month, and with some projects under crunch to finish off, August was a little light for contributions. That said, I think we made some good progress for the work we did do.

This episode we have Mario Hernandez, front end developer at Mediacurrent, to talk about his upcoming talks at DrupalCamp LA, and how to properly plan for giving a presentation.

Pages

Articles from Mediacurrent

Today, the Drupal community has officially released the first release candidate of Drupal 8, with the final release imminent.

While still a slightly slow month, September saw a slight increase in our contribution efforts over August.

Client sponsored

We were very pleased to have several clients look to make improvements in modules their sites use:

I recently inherited a Drupal 7 theme that did not use CSS preprocessors like Sass or Less. While the CSS files were clearly organized, they contained more than 15,000 lines of code which made maintainability a difficult task.

To the Drupal developers getting started with Symfony, there's a whole new set of vocabulary words we need to learn.

This episode we prattle on for quite some time. We go over the results from The Weekly Drop’s customer survey, talk about multi-site Drupal and the Paragraph and Inline Entity Form modules in the Pro Project Pick.

We all have been in situations when there are crazy crunch times before a release. Folks are working long, hard hours. Frequent last minute builds are done to fix issues and put in functionality. New bugs are then found.

When you ask people, “What makes Drupal different?” you can expect a variety of answers. Many people are likely to point to its flexibility. The technically-minded might reference Drupal’s hook system or Entity API.

With many members of staff on vacation for part of the month, and with some projects under crunch to finish off, August was a little light for contributions. That said, I think we made some good progress for the work we did do.

This episode we have Mario Hernandez, front end developer at Mediacurrent, to talk about his upcoming talks at DrupalCamp LA, and how to properly plan for giving a presentation.

Pages