I have a site with multiple nested menus. I want to exclude one item which has a few sub-items if a particular page is being viewed.
Instead of more modules, is there a way with a function or something to exclude an item based on body classes or url?
I tried adding an ID to the specific parent item and then writing a css rule based on the body class and item to display:none but since it didn't work.
So visually:
Item A
-1
-2
-3
Item B
-1
-2
-3
if on page X, I don't want Item B nor its sublinks to show.
I am new to Drupal and a friend asked me to help him with spam registration on her website. So i searched for captcha module and installed this (http://drupal.org/project/captcha).
THe installation was ok and in the settings i chose form id "user_register". (math captcha)
I refreshed the site in englisch and the captcha field was there but when i changed the language to german there was no captcha field.
I have been tasked with maintaining a Drupal site, however I don't know much about Drupal. The persons who built the sight have all but vanished or are busy with other things. Meanwhile the site is looking tired. Below is a link to it. Are there classes I could take to get me up to speed or anything of the like? Or can someone walk me through how to at least get the home page fixed?
Here are a few things that might be helpful
My organization (CLCV, www.ecovote.org) has a Drupal 6 site that was developed in 2009-10. It has custom modules and content types and a fairly complex layout. I have mostly been able to keep the modules and core up to date.
I have a three site drupal 6 multisite setup that has been working for a couple of years. I just discovered that only the front page for each site is working, and all other pages report "page not found". All of the sites are simple, few modules, no url rewriting.
Recently my hosting company adjusted some settings (for another purpose). I have to guess that is the cause.
Can anyone suggest what the symptom is a result of? Each website is set up as a parked domain at the hosting company.
I work for a web design company out of Atlanta called Army of Bees (armyofbees.com). In recent months we've been getting more work than we can handle, but we hate to turn it away.