Next up, we have a great post by Amber Himes Matz of who shares how she was able to find a way to contribute to Drupal core that works best for her through the Bug Smash Initiative on the #bugsmash channel on Drupal Slack. Rediscovering Balance in Drupal Core Contribution with #bugsmash Read more about handling an unknown amount of menu items in Olivero The better solution is to use CSS and JavaScript to enable “always on” mobile navigation, then add an event listener to display the desktop version of the menu where necessary. We continue with a post by Mike Herchel, lead developer of Drupal’s new default front-end theme Olivero, who shows how to enable support for an undefined amount of menu items in a menu built in Olivero.Ī straightforward solution would be to default to the mobile menu style over the desktop style when there’s a large amount of menu items, but as Mike points out, this can still result in problems with presentation if you’re not sure how exactly the items will fit the viewport. Supporting an unknown amount of menu items within Olivero’s menu Read more about the Composer Merge Plugin ![]() He shows the examples for both WordPress plugins and themes, as well as for Drupal modules and themes, and closes with a brief overview of the main takeaways. This plugin allows developers the ideal scenario, as Jonathan puts it, of having each custom module or plugin define its own dependency packages, which results in better maintained relationships between these custom functionalities and their dependencies. In the next post, Jonathan Daggerhart presents the Composer Merge Plugin, which enables more streamlined dependency management for Drupal and WordPress. Read more about PHP design patterns (in Drupal)Ĭomposer Managed Custom WordPress & Drupal Dependencies He finishes with a more in-depth overview and examples of dependency injections. Specifically, these are object-oriented programming, dependency injection, the factory pattern and the singleton pattern. The second half of Mohammed’s article is dedicated to using design patterns in Drupal 9. In the first half of the article, he describes design patterns in PHP and why you should use them, and provides a breakdown of the most widely used design patterns in PHP. Moving on, we have an introduction to PHP design patterns and making use of them in Drupal, written by Mohammed Farhaz of Specbee. Read more about Automatic Updates in DrupalĪn Introduction to Design Patterns in PHP (and leveraging it in Drupal) The larger portion of the article is then dedicated to an overview of the different features and modules that comprise the Automatic Updates initiative. The article starts off with a more general section with information about the initiative’s recent progress and future plans. The first article in this month’s overview comes from ImageX and gives an update on the progress and functioning of the Automatic Updates initiative, which is the number one requested feature as Dries Buytaert announced during his keynote at DrupalCon Portland in April, since website updates are one of Drupal’s biggest issues for customers and users. Here is an overview of our favorite July articles.Īutomatic Updates in Drupal: How Things are Going With the #1 Requested Feature ![]() ![]() Despite the summer vacations being in full swing, last month featured a lot of great Drupal content.
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