Update:
With HTML5 running on pretty much all platforms, you want to use the placeholder attribute instead of any sort of tricks to place a label inside your input widgets.
This is done like this:
<input type="text" placeholder="Phone Number"/>
This example will show "Phone Number" inside the input box until the user types some text in that box.
You can test with the box right here. This is just that one <input .../> tag I placed in my page HTML. (It is not in a form, but the widget itself will work as expected.)
For additional details, I ...
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 ...
Add a window target in a link. For example
[node:123 target=_blank; link]
This option only applies to links and defines the target attribute of those links, as created with:
Insert Node Parameter: title (6-1.1),
Insert Node Parameter: link (5-1.0), or
Insert Node Parameter: more (6-1.1).
Using the target option by itself resets the Insert Node module to the default behavior (i.e. no target attribute):
[node:123 target=_blank; link target more]
The title link will have target="_blank" and the more link will not.
Note that this data is ...
Select the menu to be displayed as the Simplemenu. By default, we display the Navigation Menu which makes the most sense for administrator (as the Simplemenu was primarily created for administrators wanting to quickly go to all administration pages.)
Select a theme to display your Simplemenu items and dropdowns. The default is called original.
The themes reside in the module sub-folder named themes. Each theme is defined in a specific directory named after the theme. That name is what appears in the dropdown in the settings.
It is possible to add new themes as
Version 7.x-1.x-dev is a starting point... It is not complete, although it shows you a functional Management menu as a dropdown. More to come as time allows... See issue [#791664] for more info.
Version 6.x-1.13 fixes the vertical menu problem which had to do with CSS caching getting lost.
Version 6.x-1.10 to 6.x-1.12 fixes the non-called theme() function versus the other sub-modules that have callbacks through the theme() calls. However, we really need to have callbacks instead. Added horizontal and vertical themes. Attempts to fix to the vertical menu problem
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 Boost module can be used to cache pages on your website. Unfortunately, if a page is cached, it is served without accessing Drupal. This means, the redirection offered by the MobileKey doesn't take effect on pages cached by Boost or similar modules.
Also if you have a form of proxy cache (a cache before Apache2,) then the redirection will probably be prevented by that cache early on.
The MobileKey module comes with the following settings. These settings are found here:
Administer » Site configuration » MobileKey
Since you generally give one URL to your users, your home page (called Front Page in Drupal), it can be practical to send Mobile phone users to a special URL so when they access your site they see a better adapted front page than the usual.
The settings accept a local path (i.e. mobile) or a full path (i.e. http://mobile.example.com/).
Note that this gives you a way to use the ThemeKey capability to change the theme of all ...
The main idea of MobileKey is to give you the capability to switch your website theme to a mobile specific theme when the user access your site from one's mobile phone. A mobile theme will make it easier to access your website on a mobile device.
For go to the ThemeKey settings page:
Administer » Site configuration » ThemeKey
The MobileKey adds one selection to the list of attributes to match. The new selection is called:
mobile:device
This works everywhere on your website (it is a global option, not specific to any kind of pages.) The system checks different parameters to
Get the tarball or the zip file of the module from Drupal.org (MobileKey on Drupal).
Go to one of you module folders and extract the file you downloaded.
The default installation folder is sites/all/modules, if you have a multi-site installation and want the module for just a few sites, go to sites/<sitename>/modules instead (create the modules folder if it doesn't exist yet.) It is recommended that you do not install under the top modules folder as this one is reserved for Drupal Core modules.
At that point, go to your Drupal website and go to Administer » Site building ...