Drupal 8/9 Migration: Migrating Media Items and Their Relationships
Learn how to migrate media items and their relationships from Drupal 7 to Drupal 8 or 9 media module.
Learn how to migrate media items and their relationships from Drupal 7 to Drupal 8 or 9 media module.
An all-in-one guide on agile workflows for branch management in git, specifically for devs working with Drupal 7, Drupal 8 or Drupal 9.
Since the start of lockdown in March, you’ve probably seen way more live streams on social media than you ever had before. These are taking places on platforms like YouTube, Instagram, and Facebook Live.
We recently got a question at a training from an attendee whose organization has been doing more live streams on Facebook. They also use Drupal’s built-in Media module and were wondering how they could embed their recorded live streams from Facebook onto their Drupal site. In today's tutorial, I outline two different methods for pulling this off.
Find out why your SVG icons look blurry when you export them from Sketch, and how you can work around the issue.
In a previous blog post and video, we looked at the code that controls the display of link previews on Facebook. This is outlined by Facebook's Open Graph protocol, where we modify the <meta>
tags within the <head>
of our HTML web page to say what the title, description, image, and other info should appear in our preview.
It's a lot easier to design an accessible website if you consider accessibility from the get-go, but we don't always have that luxury. You’re far more likely to have an existing site on your hands, and, if you're reading this, you're probably wondering how to determine how accessible it is currently so you can get a better idea of what needs to be done.
Here’s a simple guide to testing your Drupal site for accessibility. (Most of these apply to non-Drupal sites, too). We've divided it into 3 sections.
Jump to:
Learn how to use Facebook's Sharing Debugger to see what your social posts will look like before you hit Publish.
Learn how to create ordered lists with HTML in this step-by-step guide and video tutorial.
Use the web for a short amount of time and you'll no doubt bump into an accordion, one of those collapsible elements that, when you click on its title, opens up to reveal more information. Click the title again, and it closes back up.
If you're a web developer, you've also probably had to code one of these, myself included. There are a few different ways you could build this, but I recently learned that there's a way built right into HTML5! But first, let's take a look at the ways I (and probably you) have done this before.
Learn how to use alt text to make your website's images more accessible for your users (and search engines).