Although it is (relatively) easy to use something like Jenkins for Continuous Integration with Drupal, you can create something of a dumbed-down budget version with just four commands:
I found this link mrkadin.com/blog/node/70 on Planet Drupal, and thought it was a helpful start to setting up Ajax the easy/lazy way using views. I extended it to a bit more generic as
If you want a sneak preview on the proposed changes to content creation, and perhaps get involved in the discussion, see http://drupal.org/node/1510532. There is even a demo site to try
196511 sites use the very well established Webforms module - so it has been a very popular module for some time. However, in some ways, it is getting a bit long in the tooth now, espe
Here's a useful one you may not know about: field_get_items(). Basically, if you're trying to get field values off an entity, it can be fiddly - dealing with language, indices, etc. This function makes it much simpler.
In days gone by, providing custom fonts on a Drupal website was somewhat problematic. Now, in Drupal 7, things are much easier due to the rather intimidatingly named @font-your-face<
Although it is (relatively) easy to use something like Jenkins for Continuous Integration with Drupal, you can create something of a dumbed-down budget version with just four commands:
I found this link mrkadin.com/blog/node/70 on Planet Drupal, and thought it was a helpful start to setting up Ajax the easy/lazy way using views. I extended it to a bit more generic as
If you want a sneak preview on the proposed changes to content creation, and perhaps get involved in the discussion, see http://drupal.org/node/1510532. There is even a demo site to try
196511 sites use the very well established Webforms module - so it has been a very popular module for some time. However, in some ways, it is getting a bit long in the tooth now, espe
Here's a useful one you may not know about: field_get_items(). Basically, if you're trying to get field values off an entity, it can be fiddly - dealing with language, indices, etc. This function makes it much simpler.
In days gone by, providing custom fonts on a Drupal website was somewhat problematic. Now, in Drupal 7, things are much easier due to the rather intimidatingly named @font-your-face<