Contents contributed and discussions participated by Scott Blackburn
Free Drupal e-book guides - Drupal 6 and theme setup basics, creating content, using bl... - 0 views
Previous/Next API | drupal.org - 0 views
Drupal « Karen McGrane - 0 views
Lullabot-TheBuzzrDemoDrupalUsabilityByLullabot931.mov (video/quicktime Object) - 0 views
Building a "Blog Feature" in Drupal with Context and Spaces | Development Seed - 0 views
Context, Spaces, and Organic Groups | Development Seed - 0 views
One Blog, One Pressroom, and One Photo Gallery, coming right up! | Development Seed - 0 views
Defining Spaces Features in Code in Drupal | Development Seed - 0 views
Theming Views 2 - The Basics | Group 42 - 0 views
How to make CCK fields do some of the same tricks as taxonomy terms | !&# - 0 views
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In Drupal, taxonomy.module implements hook_term to provide links among content which shares a given term. Site builders often use this feature to provide indexes and RSS feeds of their content. Taxonomy.module's purpose is to support the creation of controlled vocabularies which we can use to classify our site's content. If taxonomy.module were a prescription drug, this would be its "on-label" or indicated use. Using taxonomy.module vocabularies and terms to store essential data about our content is what I call an "off-label" use. You're not really creating a controlled vocabulary, and the term-node relationship in these cases isn't always classificatory. However, a clever web developer will use the tools that get the job done, and often taxonomy.module is the perfect tool for making this happen. Because this information is essential to your node's content, CCK fields are indicated for this use. However, CCK fields don't have built-in linking among nodes which share values for the same field. Also absent is any built-in RSS feed for a CCK field's value. This requires some theming and Views.
DrupalEasy - 0 views
Dashboard | Code - 0 views
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