This year, DrupalCamp Scotland was held on the 7th November, at the University of Edinburgh.
On the morning of the conference I made the quick walk from by bed and breakfast and arrived at 50 George Square to join in with around 60 attendees to a day of talks and chatting.
The morning coffee and a selection of pastries was set out in the corridor outside the main room of the conference. I'm sure a few of the tasty pastries were lost to passing students.
After getting settled in we had a quick introduction session by Stratos Filalthis before we started the day.
The first talk of the day was with Paul McCrodden and Laura Waldoch, with their talk Less Is More: Streamlining 500+ Diverse University Sites into One Central Platform. Paul and Laura both work at the University of Cambridge and the talk was a look at how the university is taking the 500+ websites that are dotted around and consolodating them into a single resource. That single resource is powered by Drupal 11 and the talk looked at how they were building a Drupal install profile that could handle the requirements that these different sites had.
Managing content workflows in Drupal requires tools that track content from draft to publication. Drupal provides options for implementing workflows at different levels, from basic content moderation to field-level state management and webform submission tracking.
In the video above, you'll learn how to set up and configure Content Moderation, use field-level state management with the Field States Transitions module, and track webform submissions with the Webform Workflows Element.
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