Node Auto Term or NAT is a helper module used to facilitate node-node relationships through the use of the Taxonomy module; i.e. when a node is created, a taxonomy term is also created automatically using its title and body in any associated vocabularies. Other nodes can now be tagged with terms from these vocabularies thereby establishing node-node relationships.
For example, consider a site with two node types - product and image - and a vocabulary named Products which is associated with the image node type. When a NAT association is created between the product node type and the Products vocabulary, any product nodes created will automatically also trigger the creation of a term with the same title. Subsequently, when we create an image node, we can categorise the image under a term from the Products vocabulary thereby establishing a relationship between a product node and image nodes. Later on, using Views or the NAT module's API functions, we can load and display related image nodes while viewing product node.
This module also attempts to preserve hierarchical relationships - where possible - which is useful when creating node-node relationships within the same node type. Using the above example, we could have also allowed for product-product relationships which would facilitate sub-products and so on.
The Taxonomy Filter module is designed to present an easy-to-use interface for narrowing down taxonomy listings to find topics that are tagged by multiple terms. This is helpful for sites that use multiple vocabularies to create a multi-faceted information architecture.
Prior to Drupal 7 (see note in the "Drupal 7.x version" section), the core Drupal taxonomy module has the ability to do this with the following URL format:
/taxonomy/term/x,y,z
which will display a listing of all nodes tagged with terms x, y and z. However, not many visitors to your site will be aware of this functionality.
The Taxonomy Filter module allows your users to enjoy this functionality without needing to know the URL syntax described above. It does this by displaying a block of links that reference multiple terms from one or more vocabularies. The vocabulary filters are defined in the module's configuration settings. There the site administrator can specify that a vocabulary be 'filtered' by one or more vocabularies. The arrangement of the links in the block can also be specified by selecting one of the four menu templates -- default, cloud, context and dynamic.
This node_access module governs access to nodes based on the taxonomy terms applied to the nodes. A simple scheme based on taxonomy, roles and users controls which content is visible.
Adds a block titled "Countdown" to count the days, hours, minutes, and seconds since or until a specified event. Can configure to just show days, or days and hours, etc.