bladellano โ created an issue.
I've discovered where to configure the course's linear progression! You need to access the course category in the taxonomy, select the desired term (preferably one used by multiple courses), click on 'Edit,' and go to the 'Sort courses' tab. There, you can arrange the course titles as you prefer and check the option 'Courses must be completed in this order.'
I apologize for any earlier confusion, and as a suggestion, I believe this discovery could be added to their documentation.
bladellano โ changed the visibility of the branch 3374379-fix-approach to hidden.
Good afternoon!
I apologize if I wasnโt clear earlier. Unfortunately, I havenโt yet managed to configure the linear progression between courses.
Based on the documentation, I was able to configure the following:
This part I managed to set up:
*Linear lesson progress (i.e., access to Lesson B is given when Lesson A is completed)
I was able to do this by activating the flag that makes the lessons dependent on each other for access.
This part I couldnโt set up:
*Linear course progress (i.e., access to Course B is given when Course A is fully completed)
I couldnโt find where to set it so that to access Course X, Course B must be completed first.
Iโm considering creating a new reference field within the course to specify prerequisites. This way, I could define which items need to be completed to grant access to a specific course.
I plan to implement this solution, and if it works, I can suggest it as an improvement for the module.
bladellano โ created an issue.
A temporary solution until this submodule is compatible with the versions of the prerequisite modules is to install the 'group' and 'groupmedia' modules in the versions below:
- composer require 'drupal/group:^2.2'
- composer require 'drupal/groupmedia:^3.0'
I have the same problem. Before updating to d10, with the owlcarousel patch applied in drupal 9.5, the carousel worked normally, the images were now stacked and stretched to the sides, both on the front and when editing the views.