Is there any way that we could deal with newbies not reading the handbook at all and asking just plain obvious questions that are right there in the handbook. Should we have a general policy of ignoring these posts, answering them, or pointing people to the handbook as much as possible? I think having a general spirit of encouraging users to use the handbook and consolidating as much information as possible is the way to go. Currently drupal.org is getting littered with tons of unnecessary repeated content which is not good, at least not in my opinion.
I have installed Drupal and have been looking through the Drupal website but I can not find one particular feature I'm very interested in: using tables as building blocks. I don't mean HTML tables, but database tables. That is, tables that you can edit, sort and filter and maybe relate to other tables. It would be nice if there was a friendly user interface for creating a table, editing data, sorting and filtering. Tables like this could be used for all kinds of purposes, like task lists, inventory lists, etc.
I'm an professional web developer and apprentice graphic designer. I earn my living a site running on another CMS and I am looking to launch a brand new site with Drupal.
One of the problems I am finding is that there are very few drupal themes out there. I don't have the time or energy to design a theme from scratch, and I would perfer to tweek an exisiting theme for my purposes.
This is not a support question, since the problem seems to have fixed itself. I just want to know what the error message means.
At 5/28/2005 @ 12:35EST I ran Xenu Link Sleuth 1.2g for the first time. When I checked my site about a half-hour later, all I got was this message along the top of the screen:
"warning: call_user_func_array(): First argumented is expected to be a valid callback, 'node_page' was given in /home/brainshr/public_html/includes/menu.inc on line 354."