Have you tried:
1. Make a copy of the "Bartik" folder from the core>themes file. 2. Put this folder in your sites>all>themes folder 3. rename this folder "bartik-cjm 4. open the "bartik.info file and add "stylesheets[all][] = css/local.css" 5. Rename bartik.info file to "bartik-cjm" 5a. Create a file in the css folder called "local.css" since it's here you will be over riding the Bartik original css files 6. check all the other files in the "bartik-cjm" folder for "Bartik" and replace this with "bartik-cjm" 7. Go to Admin/appearance and you will now see your subtheme "bartik-cjm"
Pia
Hi Folks,
I am still trying to understand sub-themeing. I have four themes installed and two enabled. Bartik(enabled), Seven(enabled), Garland, Stark. I tried a minimal, trivial sub-theme of Bartik by creating a subdirectory /sites/all/themes/bartik-cjm populated as follows:
bartik-cjm/
bartik-cjm.info
css/
local.css
bartik-cjm.info:
name = Bartik-cjm base theme = Bartik
core = 7.x
stylesheets[all][] = css/local.css
According to everything I've read, and it has been a increasing amount, this should be sufficient to create a sub-theme named "Bartik-cjm" which inherits everything from Bartik and overrides local.css with my copy. I believe I should see this as one of the options in admin/appearance, and I don't. I can see that $data[system_list][theme] is populated from the MySQL database (select * from cache_bootstrap where cid = "system_list";), which only has my original four themes in the serialized object.
So, either the database must be updated somewhere, somehow, by someone, -- OR -- Drupal must look at the filesystem and realize that there is more to the story than the database knows and extend the list. So, how does Drupal become aware of the custom sub-theme?
--
Chris.
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