On 7-Jan-06, at 5:43 AM, Bèr Kessels wrote:
Op zaterdag 07 januari 2006 14:39, schreef Karoly Negyesi:
Yes, but Drumm's solution is to simply move under admin what's admin on your site, if I understood it correctly.
out of the tom of my head, a few links to prove this is not always true: /node/xxx/edit is admin when i'm maintaining a personal blog, but its not when editing my forum post. /user/xxx/edit is admiin when I'm moderator and decide to block some users, its not when I want to change my avatar. /node/add/blog is admin when I am running my personal blog. It is not when I add my blog to this huge community blog. /handbook/howto_add_a_user is admin for a corporate site that I wrote, where they have some dedicated online docs.
I am sure, that we can come up with a hundred more of these, if we start searching. Not all of these can be moved under /admin.
Nothing that you mentioned would I consider "admin" -- none of those are areas where you are working with "administrating" the site in any way (node editing is editing content). And if you want to have different themes, then go for it. For an out of the box Drupal site, what is admin is what is under the admin/ menu hierarchy. -- Boris Mann Vancouver 778-896-2747 San Francisco 415-367-3595 SKYPE borismann http://www.bryght.com