More and more, we hear talks about hackers entering personal accounts on systems such as Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and many others. There are many reasons why someone's account will be hacked. One of them is the lack of imagination for their password. Plus, some people use the same password for all of their accounts.
So, if you do it right, you will end up with many passwords. On my end, I have one password per account and that means about 400 passwords... That's totally unmanageable in a fairly standard human brain. For this reason, you end up writing down all your passwords on ...
The following features are available only when installing the Rules extension of protected nodes. This extension requires the thrid party Rules extension for Drupal.
When handling a Node, it is possible to check whether the node is currently protected or locked.
A node is said protected when the node was protected by a password using the Protected node module.
Whether the user can view that node is irrevelant in this case. Only the fact that the node requires a password to be viewed is what this condition checks.
A ...
The Protected Node module adds a field set to the Node Type form that you edit under:
Administer » Content management » Content types
These additions are explained in detail below.
The main reason for adding this feature is to avoid seeing the field set on all the node edit forms. With this feature you can hide the form on all the node types that you will never protect with a password.
This option let you choose how this node type handles the Protected Node capability.
This means this node ...
The MobileKey module is an extension of the ThemeKey module that gives you a way to switch theme based on whether the user is viewing your website with mobile phone.
The installation is very simple. Follow the default Drupal 6.x installation steps (extract the tarball under your sites/all/modules/ folder.)
The module currently supports two features, a switch to force a mobile specific theme and a global redirect for your website front page.
The To Do module includes a sub-module called To Do Rules extension.
The Rules extension includes the events as follow.
Each event is sent once per user assigned to a To Do item, including self-assigned users. It includes 4 parameters: the To Do item (a node); the To Do item author; the currently logged in user; and the assigned user. The node supports additional tokens that can be used as conditions (see below).
This event occurs when the Start button is clicked on a To Do item. This event is sent once.
This event
Today I discovered It's All Text. This was a FireFox (also works in SeaMonkey) extension that gives you the capability of editing a box of text in your favorite editor.
I love to use SeaMonkey, but the text editor is a bit light when it comes to writing code or fix broken HTML. To palliate to this problem, I often copy and paste the content of my posts from SeaMonkey to gVim, my favorite editor, apply the fixes lightning fast, and then copy the result back in SeaMonkey before saving.
This is a rather tedious process and prone to mistakes. To avoid problems, you can instead install ...
A simple menu is composed of parent menus and children menus. A child has no drop-down menu and a parent does.
By default all the menu items are active, meaning that they all are links one can click on to reach the corresponding destination.
This simplemenu extension allows for turning the link off by replacing the anchor reference in a named anchor. The HTML tag being the same, the simplemenu looks the same, but the item cannot be clicked.
At this time, there is no option to make some of the parent items clickable and others not.
There is no settings for this module.
In order to use the jsMath for displaying mathematics with TeX Drupal 6.x module you need:
The newer versions of SimpleMenu allows for an easy way of adding custom themes.
There are two main ways to add new SimpleMenu themes:
1. In the simplemenu themes folder;
2. In your theme folder.
If you look under the simplemenu folder, you will see a sub-folder named themes. You can place your own specialized themes in that folder to make them available system-wide (i.e. if you are using many themes or use one Drupal installation for many websites.) In other words, this folder is viewed as a global theme folder.
The themes folder ...
At this point, most of the Table of Contents configuration is done in the Table of Contents filter.
This means multiple Input formats allow you to make use of several different configurations.