Using Drupal
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Take advantage of Drupal’s vast collection of community-contributed modules and discover how they make this web framework unique and valuable. With this guide, you’ll learn how to combine modules in interesting ways (with minimal code-wrangling) to develop several community-driven websites— including a job posting board, photo gallery, online store, product review database, and event calendar.
The second edition focuses on Drupal 7, the latest version of this open source system. Each project spans an entire chapter, with step-by-step “recipes” to help you build out the precise functionality the site requires. With this book, developers new to Drupal will gain experience through a hands-on introduction, and experienced Drupal developers will learn real-world best practices.
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Using Drupal cuts out a lot of the research time and helps you dive headfirst into Drupal. It does an excellent job of explaining how to rapidly assemble a wide variety of websites using some of Drupal's most commonly used modules. Whether you're new to building websites or an experienced programmer, this book is full of useful information. By the end of Using Drupal, you'll be much more prepared to build the Drupal site you've always wanted.
Is That Site Running Drupal?
By Angela Byron
Various attempts at “fingerprinting” a Drupal site have been tried in the past, none of which are completely foolproof. These range from *super* easy stuff like checking for CHANGELOG.txt to checking the source for a reference to “drupal.css” (Drupal 4.7) to checking for common paths like taxonomy/term/1, and /user, (which might be aliased to something else with something like Pathauto/Path Redirect module), and so on. However, since Drupal 4.6, there's a super geeky trick you can use to fingerprint a Drupal site that works 90% of the time. 1. Get Firefox. 2. Get the Live HTTP Headers extension. 3. After restarting Firefox, click Tools > Live HTTP Headers. This'll pop up a little window to the side. 4. Visit a website you suspect of being Drupalish. 5. Highlight the Live HTTP headers window and type “exp”, looking for the following in the output: |
“Classic” Web Problems, Solved
Drupal version: 6.x
By Jeff Eaton
A lot of energy in the Drupal world goes towards solving complex problems: giving administrators ways to build publishing workflows without writing code, integrating with cool new APIs, automatically translating site content into Klingon… You know. The usual. With all of that energy focused on complex architectural problems, it's easy to lose sight of the simple solutions that Drupal provides for really common “classic” web problems. This really hit home the other week as I sifted through an old Zip disk with archives of sites I'd built for clients in the heady days of the late 90s. One by one, I started ticking off requests my clients had made that today's site-builders can solve in minutes with Drupal modules–no wacky configuration, no complicated recipes. Just a simple, “Yes!” when a client says, “Can you…?” “…Make a splash page for the site?” “…Let visitors print out copies of the pages?” “…Show visitors a Terms Of Service page before they sign up to post on the site?” “…Add a chat page where users can talk in real-time?” “…Keep other sites from stealing my content using Frames?”
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