Support for Drupal 7 is ending on 5 January 2025—it’s time to migrate to Drupal 10! Learn about the many benefits of Drupal 10 and find migration tools in our resource center.
I'm new to Drupal and I wanted to add a google analytics for my site. Seems like I added the wrong one and now it removed half of the block on my site. It is not in my extend->uninstall list and I can't remove it. I didn't build the site, I'm just maintaining it. How do I fix this? I would really appreciate any help :)
Message is:
This version is not compatible with Drupal 8.9.20 and should be replaced.
I have nodes with puzzles. I store extra info on the puzzle (say puzzle_sol) in a different table. I add this extra info to node in 'hook_node_storage_load' in my module. I then attach a special library to the page in page_attachments hook. There I use the above extra info to decide whether to attach the library or not. (if puzzle_sol was added, then attach the library ... else not)
This whole strategy is working without absolutely any issue.
It's a Drupal 8 Commerce site, and we just changed the shipping rate from 2,90 to 3,5€
Although the shipping rate appears just fine on the checkout/####/review page, On the checkout/####/order_information page appears the old shipping title and rate. The calculation on the cart is just fine. The wording is off though.
Let me share 2 pictures of the phenomenon. Here is the /review page: Review Page
I need to write code in a old durpal content source coding (I mean in the actual website admin content),,, which mean I can't use modules nor extensions (Too old AND using Bootstrap 4 theme). Last month, I built a carousel with Horizontal pics. NOW... The customer ask for keeping those horozontal pictures when somebody watch the original web version of the site AND/BUT he now gave me vertical pictures to create the same carousel, but to appear vertically when in mobile version.
The evolution of open-source projects can sometimes lead to discontinuation, otherwise known as "contrib death." However, this does not mean the end, especially when there is a clear demand for certain features.
This case study revolves around two Drupal 7 auction modules and the drive of a developer and a company to breathe new life into the concept for Drupal 8.
Background
During the lifespan of Drupal 7, two notable auction modules were prominent: