I was thinking in the line of having an admin/settings/modulename/advanced (or admin/settings/advanced/modulename), that displays a tab titled "advanced". Then each module can put whatever exotic options it has, those that are for power users, or less often used, or can be confusing. The same goes for admin/settings/advanced, where Drupal core's own advanced settings can be placed. At the top of these screens we can have a warning that the admin must really know what they are doing before changing any of this. This way, we do not hard code much, provide power for those who need it, and keep it away from sight of the majority who do not need it. P.S. Regarding the "list all variables" page, that would be nice too. But it can grow to be very long, as well as some of these variables may have a lot of info it (e.g. primary links for older themes, mission, ...etc.) On 9/6/05, Larry Garfield <larry@garfieldtech.com> wrote:
On Tuesday 06 September 2005 03:14 pm, Bèr Kessels wrote:
Op dinsdag 06 september 2005 20:37, schreef Larry Garfield:
An admin/advanced page, if we include one, should still be a well-built and well-documented page, just listing less-used stuff. Developers shouldn't have an "easy way out" of just throwing something into the advanced screen and forgetting about it.
True
IMO that page should only be a summary of already defined variables. So, in contrary to windows registry or (shivver) gnome-conf, this should (IMO) only list the variables that are settable in other places too.
Regards, Bèr
But if they're already listed elsewhere in logical places, why have a "big heat o' variables" too? If they're hard to find in their current location then we need to clean up the current location, not add a bandaid on top of it.
-- Larry Garfield AIM: LOLG42 larry@garfieldtech.com ICQ: 6817012
"If nature has made any one thing less susceptible than all others of exclusive property, it is the action of the thinking power called an idea, which an individual may exclusively possess as long as he keeps it to himself; but the moment it is divulged, it forces itself into the possession of every one, and the receiver cannot dispossess himself of it." -- Thomas Jefferson