Upgrade Your Drupal Skills

We trained 1,000+ Drupal Developers over the last decade.

See Advanced Courses NAH, I know Enough

Drupal Commerce 2: How to Add and Modify Product Content

Parent Feed: 

In part one and two of this Acro Media Tech Talk video series, we covered how you set up a new product attribute and used rendered fields, in Drupal Commerce 2. Parts three and four then to set up a product variation type and a product type, both with custom fields. This completes our new product configuration.

In part five, the last of this series, we'll finally get to try out the new product! We'll add a product to the store as if we are a store administrators (end user) who is creating content. We'll try out all of the fields and properties we've configured, make a product, and view it on the site. Afterwards, we'll cover how an administrator can then go in and edit the product to make content changes.

This entire video series, parts one through five, show you how to set up a new product in Drupal Commerce 2, from start to finish. The video is captured using our Urban Hipster Commerce 2 demo site.

Its important to note that this video was recorded before the official 2.0 release of Drupal Commerce and so you may see a few small differences between this video and the official release now available.

Urban Hipster Commerce 2 Demo site

This video was created using the Urban Hipster Commerce 2 demo site. We've built this site to show the adaptability of the Drupal 8, Commerce 2 platform. Most of what you see is out-of-the-box functionality combined with expert configuration and theming.

Visit Our Drupal Commerce 2 Demo Site

More from Acro Media
Drupal modules used in this video

Contact us and learn more about our custom ecommerce solutions

Author: 
RSS Tags: 
Original Post: 

About Drupal Sun

Drupal Sun is an Evolving Web project. It allows you to:

  • Do full-text search on all the articles in Drupal Planet (thanks to Apache Solr)
  • Facet based on tags, author, or feed
  • Flip through articles quickly (with j/k or arrow keys) to find what you're interested in
  • View the entire article text inline, or in the context of the site where it was created

See the blog post at Evolving Web

Evolving Web