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Main chapters

  1. LimeSurvey Cloud vs LimeSurvey CE
  2. LimeSurvey Cloud - Quick start guide
  3. LimeSurvey CE - Installation
  4. How to design a good survey (Guide)
  5. Getting started
  6. LimeSurvey configuration
  7. Introduction - Surveys
  8. View survey settings
  9. View survey menu
  10. View survey structure
  11. Introduction - Questions
  12. Introduction - Question Groups
  13. Introduction - Surveys - Management
  14. Survey toolbar options
  15. Multilingual survey
  16. Quick start guide - ExpressionScript
  17. Advanced features
  18. General FAQ
  19. Troubleshooting
  20. Workarounds
  21. License
  22. Version change log
  23. Plugins - Advanced
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Translations

Translations:New Template System in LS3.x/128/en

From LimeSurvey Manual

So why do we use the statement <replace>custom.css</replace> inside the fruity manifest? The answer is easy: because we want the end user to be able to extend the fruity theme, to modify the file in his local theme, and to load this modified file from his inherited theme. To understand, just extend fruity and have a look to the extended theme. THe extended theme doesn't even have the file custom.css. So the one of fruity will be used. But: if the user create this file in the extended theme (by clicking on "extend" in the theme editor), then this file will be loaded from his theme.