PmWiki.CustomMarkup 8.7 KB

12345678910
  1. version=pmwiki-2.1.14 ordered=1 urlencoded=1
  2. agent=Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux i686 (x86_64); en-US; rv:1.8.0.6) Gecko/20060728 SUSE/1.5.0.6-1.3 Firefox/1.5.0.6
  3. author=Pm
  4. csum=
  5. host=24.1.26.255
  6. name=PmWiki.CustomMarkup
  7. rev=83
  8. targets=PmWiki.CustomMarkup,PmWiki.LocalCustomizations,PmWiki.DocumentationIndex,PmWiki.Skins
  9. text=%25audience%25 administrators (intermediate)%0a!! Introduction%0a%0aPmWiki's markup translation engine is handled by a set of rules; each rule searches for a specific pattern in the markup text and replaces it with some replacement text. Internally, this is accomplished by using PHP's "[[(http://www.php.net/)preg_replace]]" function.%0a%0aRules are added to the translation engine via PmWiki's Markup() function, which looks like%0a%0a->[@Markup($name, $when, $pattern, $replace);@]%0a%0awhere [@$name@] is a unique name (a string) given to the rule, [@$when@] says when the rule should be applied relative to other rules, [@$pattern@] is the pattern to be searched for in the markup text, and [@$replace@] is what the pattern should be replaced with.%0a%0aFor example, here's the code that creates the rule for [@''emphasized text''@] (in ''scripts/stdmarkup.php''):%0a%0a->[@Markup("em", "inline", "/''(.*?)''/", "%3cem>$1%3c/em>");@]%0a%0aBasically this statement says to create a rule called "em" to be performed with the other "inline" markups, and the rule replaces any text inside two pairs of single quotes with the same text ($1) surrounded by [@%3cem>@] and [@%3c/em>@].%0a%0aThe first two parameters to Markup() are used to specify the sequence in which rules should be applied. The first parameter provides a name for a rule -- "[@em@]" in the example above. We could've chosen other names such as "[@''@]", or even "[@twosinglequotes@]". In general PmWiki uses the markup itself to name the rule (i.e., PmWiki uses "[@''@]" instead of "[@em@]"), but to keep this example easier to read later on we'll use a mnemonic name for now.%0a%0aThe second parameter says that this rule is to be done along with the other "inline" markups. PmWiki divides the translation process into a number of phases:%0a%0a[@%0a_begin start of translation%0afulltext translations to be performed on the full text %0asplit conversion of the full markup text into lines to be processed%0adirectives directive processing%0ainline inline markups%0alinks conversion of [[links]], url-links, and WikiWords %0ablock block markups%0astyle style handling %0a_end end of translation%0a@]%0a%0aThus, specifying "inline" for the second parameter says that this rule should be applied when the other "inline" rules are being performed. If we want a rule to be performed with the directives -- i.e., before inline rules are processed, we would specify "directives" or "%3cinline" for the second parameter.%0a%0aThe third parameter is a Perl-compatible regular expression. Basically, it is a slash, a [[regular expression -> http://www.php.net/manual/en/reference.pcre.pattern.syntax.php]], another slash, and a set of optional [[modifiers -> http://www.php.net/manual/en/reference.pcre.pattern.modifiers.php]].%0a%0aThe example uses the pattern string [@"/''(.*?)''/"@], which uses [@''(.*)''@] as the regular expression and no options. (The regular expression says "find two single quotes in succession, then as few arbitrary characters as are needed to make the match find something, then two additional single quotes in succession"; the parentheses "capture" a part of the wikitext for later use.)%0a%0aThe fourth parameter is the replacement text that should be inserted instead of the marked-up wikitext. You can use [@$1@], [@$2@], etc. to insert the text from the first, second etc. parenthesised part of the regular expression.%0a%0aIn the example, we have [@"%3cem>$1%3c/em>"@], which is an [@%3cem>@], the text matched by the first parentheses (i.e. by the [@.*?@] section of the pattern), and [@%3c/em>@].%0a%0aHere's a rule for [@@@monospaced@@@] text:%0a%0a->[@Markup("@@", "inline", "/@@(.*?)@@/", "%3ccode>$1%3c/code>");@]%0a%0aand for a [@[:comment ...:]@] directive that is simply removed from the output:%0a%0a->[@Markup("comment", "directives", "/\\[:comment .*?:\\]/", '');@]%0a%0aOkay, now how about the rule for [@'''strong emphasis'''@]? We have to be a bit careful here, because although this translation should be performed along with other inline markup, we also have to make sure that the rule for [@'''@] is handled ''before'' the rule for [@''@], because [@'''@] also contains [@''@]. The second parameter to Markup() can be used to specify the new rule's relationship to any other rule:%0a%0a->[@Markup("strong", "%3cem", "/'''(.*?)'''/", "%3cstrong>$1%3c/strong>");@]%0a%0aThis creates a rule called "strong", and the second parameter "%3cem" says to be sure that this rule is processed before the "em" rule we defined above. If we wanted to do something after the "em" rule, we would use ">em" instead. Thus, it's possible to add rules at any point in PmWiki's markup translation process in an extensible manner. (In fact, the "inline", "block", "directives", etc., phases above are just placeholder rules used to provide an overall sequence for other rules. Thus one can use "%3cinline" to specify rules that should be handled before any other inline rules.) %0a%0aIf you want to disable available markup just call e.g.:%0a%0a->[@DisableMarkup("strong")@]%0a%0aPmWiki's default markup rules are defined in the ''scripts/stdmarkup.php'' file. To see the entire translation table as the program is running, the scripts/diag.php module adds "[@?action=ruleset@]", which displays the set of defined markup rules in the sequence in which they will be processed. You can see it at [[CustomMarkup?action=ruleset | CustomMarkup?action=ruleset]].%0a%0a!! Other common examples%0a%0a!!! Define a custom markup to produce a specific HTML or Javascript sequence%0a%0aSuppose an admin wants to have a simple "[@(:example:)@]" markup that will always produce a fixed HTML string in the output, such as for a webring, Google AdSense display, or Javascript. The Markup() call to do this would be:%0a%0a->[@%0aMarkup('example', 'directives',%0a '/\\(:example:\\)/',%0a Keep("%3cdiv class='example'>%3cp>Here is a %0a %3ca target='_blank' href='http://www.example.com'>link%3c/a> to%0a %3cem>example.com%3c/em>%3c/p>%3c/div>") );%0a@]%0a%0a* The first argument is a unique name for the markup ("example").%0a* The second argument says to perform this markup along with other directives.%0a* The third argument is the pattern to look for "(:example:)".%0a* The fourth argument is the HTML that "(:example:)" is to be replaced with. We use the Keep() function here to prevent the output from being further processed by PmWiki's markup rule -- in the above example, we don't want the http://www.example.com url to be again converted to a link.%0a%0a%0a!!! Define a markup to call a custom function that returns content%0a%0aAn 'e' option on the [@$pattern@] parameter will cause the [@$replace@] parameter to be treated as a PHP expression to be evaluated instead of replacement text. Thus, a markup to produce a random number between 1 and 100 might look like:%0a%0a->[@%0aMarkup('random', 'directives',%0a '/\\(:random:\\)/e',%0a "rand(1, 10)");%0a@]%0a%0aThis calls the PHP built-in rand() function and substitutes the directive with the result. Any function can be called, including functions defined in a [[local customization(s)]] file.%0a%0aArguments can also be passed by using regular expression capturing parentheses, thus%0a%0a->[@%0aMarkup('randomargs', 'directives',%0a '/\\(:random (\\d+) (\\d+):\\)/e',%0a "rand('$1', '$2')");%0a@]%0a%0awill cause the markup [@(:random 50 100:)@] to generate a random number between 50 and 100.%0a%0a->%25note%25 Note: Be very careful with the /e modifier in regular expressions; malicious authors may be able to pass strings that cause arbitrary and undesirable PHP functions to be executed.%0a%0aFor a PmWiki function to help with parsing arbitrary sequences of arguments and key=value pairs, see Cookbook:ParseArgs.%0a%0a%25trail%25%3c%3c|[[Documentation Index]]|>>%0a%0a>>faq%3c%3c [[#faq]]%0a%0aQ: How can I embed JavaScript into a page's output?%0a%0aA: There are several ways to do this. The [[Cookbook:JavaScript]] recipe describes a simple means for embedding static JavaScript into web pages using [[custom markup]]. For editing JavaScript directly in wiki pages (which can pose various security risks), see the [[(Cookbook:)JavaScript-Editable]] recipe. For JavaScript that is to appear in headers or footers of pages, the [[skin(s)]] template can be modified directly, or %3cscript> statements can be inserted using the $HTMLHeaderFmt array.%0a>>%3c%3c%0a%0a
  10. time=1156526650