Within the Lift ecosystem, "contexts" can be thought of as pre-defined functionality that makes data available to the personalization tools, when that data exists in the current state (of the site/user/environment/whatever else).
A few weeks ago I decided to rebuild this portfolio/blog site. The old site was running on Drupal 7, and I had long tired of the design; it was somewhat slow, too.
A few weeks ago I wrote a helper module which allows you to automatically export contexts created via the Context module into code, and then instantly provide them as default contexts.
It is a very common need to be able to enter a menu path similar to user/[uid]/profile in the Drupal menu system ([uid] being a dynamic argument for the user's id), but that's not possible out of the box, and there are no modules which provide thi
Domain Access is a module which allows you to simulate Drupal's internal multi-site functionality; it is easy to set up, and even easier to use. This is (by far) the simplest way of sharing content (and users) between multiple sites.
Within the Lift ecosystem, "contexts" can be thought of as pre-defined functionality that makes data available to the personalization tools, when that data exists in the current state (of the site/user/environment/whatever else).
A few weeks ago I decided to rebuild this portfolio/blog site. The old site was running on Drupal 7, and I had long tired of the design; it was somewhat slow, too.
A few weeks ago I wrote a helper module which allows you to automatically export contexts created via the Context module into code, and then instantly provide them as default contexts.
It is a very common need to be able to enter a menu path similar to user/[uid]/profile in the Drupal menu system ([uid] being a dynamic argument for the user's id), but that's not possible out of the box, and there are no modules which provide thi
Domain Access is a module which allows you to simulate Drupal's internal multi-site functionality; it is easy to set up, and even easier to use. This is (by far) the simplest way of sharing content (and users) between multiple sites.