<DIV> I noticed something interesting. The documentation was pointing out how incompatible 4.7 4.6, 4.5, and 4.4 are in terms of themes, and perhaps modules. Fantatico is used for the installations of Drupal and it now installs Drupal 4.5 I think. So, when the themes that I got that were 4.6 versions seemed to work, the idea that I was using the 4.6 version of the theme may have explained some few bugs or problems. They seemed to work ok, but I guess that might explain some things. I just noticed that the themes and modules have different versions that just won't work if paired with the wrong version of Drupal. So, we don't have backwards compatibility with themes or modules, correct?</DIV> <DIV> </DIV> <DIV>Bruce<BR><BR><B><I>Steven Peck <speck@blkmtn.org></I></B> wrote:</DIV> <BLOCKQUOTE class=replbq style="PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT: #1010ff 2px solid">menu_otf or menu on the fly module.<BR>The
functionality is built into Drupal 4.7.<BR><BR>________________________________<BR><BR>From: support-bounces@drupal.org on behalf of Jason Flatt<BR>Sent: Thu 1/12/2006 7:22 PM<BR>To: support@drupal.org<BR>Subject: Re: [support] Basic help getting started<BR><BR><BR><BR>On Thursday 12 January 2006 07:30, Bruce Whealton wrote:<BR>><BR>> Here's another question relating to the prior posts I had on creating<BR>> content and adding it to a menu. I thought that there was a way to have a<BR>> story, page, book page, etc when you publish it select where it should<BR>> appear on the menu, i.e. with parent Navigation or parent mycustom<BR>> menu/mysubmenu etc. Can that be done and how?<BR><BR>It is not automatic, but you can create menu and submenu items like you are<BR>asking about. First you have to make sure the Menu module is enabled in<BR>admin/modules. Next go to admin/menu and go to town. You can add menu items<BR>to the main Navigation menu, or add a separate menu.
If you add a new menu,<BR>you'll need to go to admin/block to show it.<BR><BR>> Then the question that follows is what I think is already answered for me<BR>> sufficiently. But, I was planning to create a site with Drupal for an<BR>> Architectural firm. The idea was to give them a way to maintain the site,<BR>> update it, etc. without me when I finish. I'm not assuming the customer<BR>> can do any programming or web design. That can and has been done for<BR>> companies/customers, with Drupal, correct? Only when certain<BR>> administrative tasks are required would they need to call me again. That's<BR>> reasonable to do with Drupal, correct? Thanks,<BR><BR>Yes, that is correct.<BR><BR>--<BR>Jason Flatt<BR>http://www.oadae.net/<BR>jason@oadae.net<BR>--<BR>[ Drupal support list | http://lists.drupal.org/ ]<BR><BR><BR><BR>-- <BR>[ Drupal support list | http://lists.drupal.org/ ]</BLOCKQUOTE> <DIV><BR></DIV><BR><BR>+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++<br>Bruce
Whealton - Webmaster/Designer/publisher/Writer<br>admin@TriangleWebServcies.com<br>Street Exposure - Street Newspaper<br>http://StreetExposure.blogspot.com/<br>+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++<p>
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