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Modernizing Drupal 10 Theme Development

You're reading from   Modernizing Drupal 10 Theme Development Build fast, responsive Drupal websites with custom theme design to deliver a rich user experience

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803238098
Length 360 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Luca Lusso Luca Lusso
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Luca Lusso
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Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1 – Styling Drupal
2. Chapter 1: Setting up a Local Environment FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Setting a New Theme and Build Process 4. Chapter 3: How Drupal Renders an HTML Page 5. Chapter 4: Mapping the Design to Drupal Components 6. Chapter 5: Styling the Header and the Footer 7. Chapter 6: Styling the Content 8. Chapter 7: Styling Forms 9. Chapter 8: Styling Views 10. Chapter 9: Styling Blocks 11. Chapter 10: Styling the Maintenance, Taxonomy, Search Results, and 403/404 Pages 12. Part 2 – Advanced Topics
13. Chapter 11: Single Directory Components 14. Chapter 12: Creating Custom Twig Functions and Filters 15. Chapter 13: Making a Theme Configurable 16. Chapter 14: Improving Performance and Accessibility 17. Part 3 – Decoupled Architectures
18. Chapter 15: Building a Decoupled Frontend 19. Index 20. Other Books You May Enjoy

Setting up the environment to build a decoupled site

Since Drupal 8, the CMS can natively expose its internal structures (entities and configurations) to third-party systems.

With minimal or no configuration, you can start building the frontend of a Drupal website without using Twig and instead choose one of the many available JavaScript frameworks (such as Next.js, Vue.js, or React).

Drupal core provides two modules that can be used to expose content and other data to the to external systems:

  • RESTful Web Services
  • JSON:API

Both modules have pros and cons, and you should choose the one most appropriate for your use case. Sometimes, to fulfill requirements for some complex websites, you may have to use both.

In the following sections, we’ll expose data first with RESTful Web Services and then with JSON:API module to feed some vanilla JavaScript code. The output will be a fully decoupled HTML page that renders the details of a trip.

Figure 15.1 – A trip node rendered in a plain HTML file ...
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