Every Drupal site builder will at some point experience the dread of accidentally making configuration changes on production thinking it's their local site.
Every Drupal site builder will at some point experience the dread of accidentally making configuration changes on production thinking it's their local site.
Whenever I post a tutorial about sending emails using Drupal, the first question I get asked is how to send emails as HTML. By default, emails are sent as plain text in Drupal 7.
Whenever I post a tutorial about sending emails using Drupal, the first question I get asked is how to send emails as HTML. By default, emails are sent as plain text in Drupal 7.
Every Drupal site builder will at some point experience the dread of accidentally making configuration changes on production thinking it's their local site.
Every Drupal site builder will at some point experience the dread of accidentally making configuration changes on production thinking it's their local site.
Whenever I post a tutorial about sending emails using Drupal, the first question I get asked is how to send emails as HTML. By default, emails are sent as plain text in Drupal 7.
Whenever I post a tutorial about sending emails using Drupal, the first question I get asked is how to send emails as HTML. By default, emails are sent as plain text in Drupal 7.