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Diffstat (limited to 'modules/taxonomy/taxonomy.module')
-rw-r--r-- | modules/taxonomy/taxonomy.module | 2 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/modules/taxonomy/taxonomy.module b/modules/taxonomy/taxonomy.module index d18185980..ac549c1fd 100644 --- a/modules/taxonomy/taxonomy.module +++ b/modules/taxonomy/taxonomy.module @@ -924,7 +924,7 @@ function taxonomy_help($section = 'admin/help#taxonomy') { <h3>Background</h3> <p>Taxonomy is the study of classification. Drupal's taxonomy module allows you to define categories which are used to classify content. The module supports hierarchical classification and association between terms, allowing for truly flexible information retrieval and classification. For more details about <a href=\"%classification-types\">classification types</a> and insight into the development of the <em>taxonomy.module</em>, see this <a href=\"%drupal-dis\">drupal.org discussion</a>.</p> <h3>An example taxonomy: food</h3> - <ul><li>Dairy<ul><li>Milk</li></ul></li><li>Drink<ul><li>Alchohol<ul><li>Beer</li><li>Wine</li></ul></li><li>Pop</li><li>Milk</li></ul></li><li>Meat<ul><li>Beef</li><li>Chicken</li><li>Lamb</li></ul></li><li>Spices<ul><li>Sugar</li></ul></li></ul> + <ul><li>Dairy<ul><li>Milk</li></ul></li><li>Drink<ul><li>Alcohol<ul><li>Beer</li><li>Wine</li></ul></li><li>Pop</li><li>Milk</li></ul></li><li>Meat<ul><li>Beef</li><li>Chicken</li><li>Lamb</li></ul></li><li>Spices<ul><li>Sugar</li></ul></li></ul> <p><strong>Notes</strong></p><ul><li>The term <em>Milk</em> appears within both <em>Dairy</em> and <em>Drink</em>. This is an example of <em>multiple parents</em> for a term.</li><li>In Drupal the order of siblings (e.g. <em>Beef</em>, <em>Chicken</em>, <em>Lamb</em>) in a taxonomy may be controlled with the <em>weight</em> parameter.</li></ul> <h3>Vocabularies</h3> <p>When you create a controlled vocabulary you are creating a set of terms to use for describing content (known as descriptors in indexing lingo). Drupal allows you to describe each node of content (blog, story, etc.) using one or many of these terms. For simple implementations, you might create a set of categories without subcategories, similar to <a href=\"%slashdot\">Slashdot</a>'s sections. For more complex implementations, you might create a hierarchical list of categories such as <em>Food</em> taxonomy shown above.</p> |