Book Image

Drupal 10 Masterclass

By : Adam Bergstein
Book Image

Drupal 10 Masterclass

By: Adam Bergstein

Overview of this book

Learning Drupal can be challenging because of its robust, extensible, and powerful capability for digital experiences, making it difficult for beginners to grasp and use it for application development. If you’re looking to break into Drupal with hands-on knowledge, this Drupal 10 Masterclass is for you. With this book, you’ll gain a thorough knowledge of Drupal by understanding its core concepts, including its technical architecture, frontend, backend, framework, and latest features. Equipped with foundational knowledge, you’ll bootstrap and install your first project with expert guidance on maintaining Drupal applications. Progressively, you’ll build applications using Drupal’s core features such as content structures, multilingual support, users, roles, Views, search, and digital assets. You’ll discover techniques for developing modules and themes and harness Drupal’s robust content management through layout builder, blocks, and content workflows. The book familiarizes you with prominent tools such as Git, Drush, and Composer for code deployments and DevOps practices for Drupal application management. You’ll also explore advanced use cases for content migration and multisite implementation, extending your application’s capabilities. By the end of this book, you’ll not only have learned how to build a successful Drupal application but may also find yourself contributing to the Drupal community.
Table of Contents (31 chapters)
1
Part 1:Foundational Concepts
7
Part 2:Setting up - Installing and Maintaining
10
Part 3:Building - Features and Configuration
12
Chapter 9: Users, Roles, and Permissions
17
Part 4:Using - Content Management
21
Part 5:Advanced Topics
Appendix A - Drupal Terminology

Technical requirements

Given this is an advanced chapter, some specific technical knowledge is assumed. Themes in Drupal leverage CSS, JavaScript, and HTML. This book does not cover these topics in depth given they are not specific to Drupal.

As stated earlier, functionality built in Drupal is typically put together using entities, views, display modes etc. All of these exist outside of the theme layer. The theme layer exists to change markup around existing functionality, and add the ability to style and add interactivity to it.

As of the time of this writing, Drupal’s paid theme ecosystem is very small (compared to other CMSs such as WordPress) because of several reasons:

It’s hard to style functionality that the theme author doesn’t know will exist

Most Drupal sites tend to be on the larger side, and require custom bespoke designs