7
Ok,
You may already be doing these steps guys but I will detail them.
When I first used XOOPS I was unaware of the unlocked potential behind cloning your "entire" template set. This is what I am refering to.
1: you log on to your site as admin
2 Modules system admin-templates
3 If you havent already made a template set, then you want to
clone you default set
give it a name like (mysite2..etc)
4: Now you have created a full template set...
Go to system admin preferences-choose your newly created template set as the default template set.
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Now you can always go back in through the template manager,
find the template for the corresponding module you wish to tweek, click on it , click edit:...(you can do it online, or use an editor like dreamweaver if you wish,)but now you can use the interface in XOOPS (just a text editor) to tweek things.
Often I do use a wysiwyg editor seperately, copy and paste into it to see what Im really tweeking. (but to get a clear idea of this you should have a local version of your css styles)
Cloning:
What this does in essence is insure that you have a default template set. (you also can't edit online unless you have a set created) One you can always go back to if you tweak stuff too much! (believe me it comes in handy when you mess someting up, you can just open your default version of it and copy it back into it)
Well I hope this is making more sense now?