Photo gallery module drupal 78/15/2023 ![]() Gallery displays that leverage contextual filters, exposed filters, and even things like Search API facets are all possible thanks to the flexibility of views. I also wanted to point out that the views integration offers the ability to do some pretty advanced and powerful gallery setups. Those options (and warning) within the field-specific format settings only exists for special (edge) use cases that are probably beyond the scope of your tutorial. All of the formatter settings for the gallery are contained in the views “format” settings that you referred to in an earlier step. Specifically, that last step “You can now choose the settings for your individual images” and screenshot could be dropped as the field-specific formatter settings don’t actually have any effect for this type of views usage. I just wanted to note that the views instructions you’ve posted seem to contain an unnecessary step that you may want to edit out. I came across this via Drupal Planet, thanks Steve for the writeup. If you are a Pro user, you would have to set them manually in the gallery configuration options. You can see the full list of configuration options for Juicebox galleries …, but note that some of those are not yet available for direct setting through Drupal or not available at all to Lite users. It should be noted, however, that much of the CSS you would be looking to change will probably be available as settings in Juicebox itself. It’s also possible to ‘theme’ the Juicebox galleries on the professional version. Switching from portrait to landscape images is sure to leave a large amount of space along the edges of the image.įinally, if you cannot get what you want with those settings, you can try working on the CSS of the gallery itself. Small images will not be stretched in a Juicebox, and if the width and height of the settings of the Juicebox are not where you want them, you’ll get a large space between the edge of the Juicebox and the edge of the image.Īlso, make sure your images are consistent in size and aspect ratio. ![]() The next big thing is to make sure your images are large enough to fill the space you want. Setting a width and height does make the gallery less flexible/responsive, but it gives you more control over the space available to images. By default, Juicebox’s width and height are set to 100%, meaning they’ll fill whatever space you give them. You should probably try to set the width and height of the gallery. There are configuration options mentioned above that will allow you to do that for either method. I’d start by setting the background color of the gallery to the same color as your site’s background, just to remove the ‘edge’ of the frame. Perhaps you could configure a View using method #2 described above to render image files, but you’d need to figure out how to filter out the images you did not want.Īs for removing the frame, Juicebox has (particularly the professional version) has a TON of options in this regard. The closest you could come would be using something like Bulk Media Upload (… to get the images on the site, but then you would still have to get them in a gallery. That would really be reliant on the field that held them. As far as I know there is no method of bulk uploading images for use in a Juicebox gallery.
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