Introducing Contenta, The Next Wave in Decoupled Drupal
Contenta, a community-driven API distribution, is making it easier for non-Drupalers to harness the power of a decoupled Drupal CMS.
Decoupled Blocks with Drupal 8 and JavaScript
From his sessions on Next-Level Drupal: Applied Progressive Decoupling With JavaScript at Drupalcon New Orleans and Ph
Friday 5: 5 Questions About Decoupling Drupal
TGIF - we hope you'd had a great week and that you're gearing up for an even better weekend.
Welcome back to Episode 18 of The Mediacurrent Friday 5. This week, we address 5 Questions About Decoupling Drupal.
4 Benefits of Decoupled Architecture for Enterprise Digital Marketers
This post is a part of our Marketer's Guide to Drupal 8 series. We created this guide to walk you through considerations for choosing an open source CMS, plus case studies and CMO advice to bring your site to the next level.
Decoupling In Drupal 8 Based on a Proven Model
This post will be a departure of sorts from my previous series. Instead, I’d like to examine how a proven model of a Panels-based, javascript-framework-agnostic, progressively decoupled solution might guide Drupal’s path forward.
Building Wunderground.com: Component Reuse on a Page
As mentioned in our first post, refactoring the Presentation Framework originally built for weather.com to be javascript framework agnostic and work with Angular 2 presented us with some interesting challenges. Today, I’ll talk about the second big problem we encountered when building out this system - how do we allow the exact same component to be placed on a page multiple times?
Building Wunderground.com: How to Bootstrap
In choosing to adopt a framework without an official release, there were problems to be overcome as well. The biggest complication we encountered was that since the project is still in beta, much of the documentation is not fleshed out, and some of the specific architectural challenges we were trying to solve were not documented anywhere at all.
Building Wunderground.com with Drupal & Angular 2
One of the requests of the Wunderground team in beginning this effort, was that instead of starting a new project using Angular 1, they wanted to push into new territory and use the not-yet-released Angular 2.