Drupal User Guide
GuideChapter 8. Blocks
CourseChapter 3. Installation
CourseChapter 14. Final Thoughts
CourseCustomizing the available regions in your theme is one of the first things you'll do when creating your own themes. Doing so gives you complete control over where content is displayed on the page, and the markup involved. Adding regions to a theme is a two-step process that involves editing your theme's THEMENAME.info.yml file and updating your page.html.twig file.
In this tutorial we'll:
- Declare one or more new regions in our themes THEMENAME.info.yml file.
- Output the content of those regions in our theme via the page.html.twig file.
By the end of this tutorial you should be able to add or edit the regions a theme provides. Also, you'll ensure that blocks placed into regions are displayed by outputting the regions in the page template.
Contributed and custom themes can ship with a thumbnail screenshot that will be used to represent the theme when listing themes in the administration UI.
In this tutorial you'll learn how to:
- Prepare your site for the screenshot
- Create a screenshot of your theme
- Define a screenshot file for your theme in the THEMENAME.info.yml file
Preprocess functions are specially-named functions that can be used to add new variables to a Twig template file. They are commonly used by themes to add new variables based on custom PHP logic and simplify accessing the data contained in complex entity structures. For example: adding a variable to all node.html.twig template files that contains the combined content a couple of specific fields under a meaningful name like {{ call_to_action }}
. Modules use preprocess functions to expose the dynamic data they manage to Twig template files, or to alter data provided by another module based on custom logic.
In this tutorial we'll learn how to:
- Use PHP to perform some complex logic in our theme.
- Store the resulting calculation in a variable.
- Make that variable available to a Twig template file.
Example use cases for adding variables with preprocess functions include:
- Anytime calculating the value to output in a template requires logic more complex than an if/else statement.
- Anytime the desired value requires additional string manipulation beyond what can be easily accomplished using an existing Twig filter or function.
By the end of this tutorial you should be able to expose new variables to a Twig template file by defining a preprocess function in either a module or a theme.