Ok and I am happy to do that but I didn't use a module at all, it's straight code, not a lot but basically iframe,jquery and css. So where so you think I should put it?
In similar cases, I have posted procedures and a little code in an appropriate issue queue, to help others, and likewise have found and gratefully used information like this from others.
Ursula
On Mar 10, 2012 5:58 PM, "Gerald Klein" <jk@zognet.com> wrote:I guess the fix is just code and not a module, I basically just used an Ifram, Jquery and css and it works fine. I just thought I would share the procedure. It is not a module just a little code, the solution is actually quite simple.--jerryOn Sat, Mar 10, 2012 at 7:49 PM, Richard Damon <Richard@damon-family.org> wrote:
On 3/10/12 8:24 PM, Gerald Klein wrote:
> That sounds very formal, I was thinking more of a step by step type of
> thing, or maybe I am misunderstanding but I will happily contribute
> the code, it wasn't that tough.
>
> --jerry
I am assuming that what you wrote ends up being a module. If so, the
best way to share it is to get it on drupal.org by this method. That way
anyone who uses it can get updates automatically, and you have all the
infrastructure provided (issue queues etc.) Just putting a module out
there for people to add outside of this system can create headaches.
Now, if your code is just a patch to an existing module, things are a
bit simpler, post the fix on the issue queue of the module you changed
and if the maintainers of the module like it, they can add it to the
next update.
--
Richard Damon
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Gerald Klein DBA
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