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Drupal 8 Module Development

You're reading from   Drupal 8 Module Development Build modules and themes using the latest version of Drupal 8

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789612363
Length 580 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Author (1):
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Daniel Sipos Daniel Sipos
Author Profile Icon Daniel Sipos
Daniel Sipos
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Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Developing for Drupal 8 FREE CHAPTER 2. Creating Your First Module 3. Logging and Mailing 4. Theming 5. Menus and Menu Links 6. Data Modeling and Storage 7. Your Own Custom Entity and Plugin Types 8. The Database API 9. Custom Fields 10. Access Control 11. Caching 12. JavaScript and the Ajax API 13. Internationalization and Languages 14. Batches, Queues, and Cron 15. Views 16. Working with Files and Images 17. Automated Testing 18. Drupal 8 Security 19. Other Books You May Enjoy

Theme hooks

Since we have covered some of the principles behind the Drupal theme system—most notably, the separation of concerns—let's go a bit deeper and take a look at how they are actually put into practice. This all starts with the theme hooks. Yes, Drupal always loves to call things hooks.

Theme hooks define how a specific piece of data should be rendered. They are registered with the theme system by modules (and themes) using hook_theme(). In doing so, they get a name, a list of variables they output (the data that needs to be wrapped with markup), and other options.

The modules and themes that register theme hooks also need to provide an implementation (one that will be used by default). In Drupal 7, this was done in the following two ways: either via a PHP function that returned a string (markup) or a PHPTemplate template file. Both were equally important...

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