100 lines
No EOL
4.3 KiB
JSON
100 lines
No EOL
4.3 KiB
JSON
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"uuid": [
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"langcode": [
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"value": "en"
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}
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],
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"type": [
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{
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"target_id": "daily_email",
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"target_type": "node_type",
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"target_uuid": "8bde1f2f-eef9-4f2d-ae9c-96921f8193d7"
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}
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"revision_timestamp": [
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{
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"value": "2025-05-11T09:00:05+00:00"
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}
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"target_uuid": "b8966985-d4b2-42a7-a319-2e94ccfbb849"
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}
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],
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"title": [
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{
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"value": "Drupal applications are modular monoliths"
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}
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],
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"created": [
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{
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"value": "2024-10-21T00:00:00+00:00"
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}
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"value": "2025-05-11T09:00:05+00:00"
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"path": [
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"alias": "\/daily\/2024\/10\/21\/drupal-applications-are-modular-monoliths",
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"langcode": "en"
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}
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],
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"body": [
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{
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"value": "\n <p>\"Modular monolith\" has been a popular phrase in the PHP community recently with talks, podcast episodes and courses released on the topic.<\/p>\n\n<p>The idea is that instead of all the code being in one namespace, like App, it's split into different modules such as for payments or a blog - whatever is relevant and appropriate for that application.<\/p>\n\n<p>Each module contains its own classes and structure instead of everything being mixed together.<\/p>\n\n<p>If you want to change something about payments, you go to the payments module and you don't need to worry about anything else.<\/p>\n\n<p>What's interesting is that this is how I've always built Drupal applications.<\/p>\n\n<p>Each includes Drupal core and any contributed modules installed via Composer, and a specific directory for application-specific custom modules.<\/p>\n\n<p>These modules can be separate and standalone or they can interact and have dependencies and sub-modules.<\/p>\n\n<p>Each has its own routes, services, tests and more, making them easy to organise and maintain compared to having all the custom code in one large monolithic namespace or module.<\/p>\n\n ",
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"format": "full_html",
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"processed": "\n <p>\"Modular monolith\" has been a popular phrase in the PHP community recently with talks, podcast episodes and courses released on the topic.<\/p>\n\n<p>The idea is that instead of all the code being in one namespace, like App, it's split into different modules such as for payments or a blog - whatever is relevant and appropriate for that application.<\/p>\n\n<p>Each module contains its own classes and structure instead of everything being mixed together.<\/p>\n\n<p>If you want to change something about payments, you go to the payments module and you don't need to worry about anything else.<\/p>\n\n<p>What's interesting is that this is how I've always built Drupal applications.<\/p>\n\n<p>Each includes Drupal core and any contributed modules installed via Composer, and a specific directory for application-specific custom modules.<\/p>\n\n<p>These modules can be separate and standalone or they can interact and have dependencies and sub-modules.<\/p>\n\n<p>Each has its own routes, services, tests and more, making them easy to organise and maintain compared to having all the custom code in one large monolithic namespace or module.<\/p>\n\n ",
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"summary": null
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}
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"imported": "2025-05-11T09:00:05+00:00",
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