Hi Sergiy,

 

I have got TinyMCE producing valid XHTML now.  The page link parsing in BigText fields sounds like a very useful piece of functionality and is something our content editors have asked about in the past, however for now I’m content to do without it.

 

Regards,

 

Miles.

 


From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, May 16, 2006 2:38 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: XHTML compliance

 


Hi Miles,

under the page link parsing, I ment the feature, where the cross-links, i.e. page links that are used in BigText fields are parsed and stored in a separate database table (jahia_link). These dependencies are used, e.g. for displaying a warning message in case you are deleting a page, that is referenced in a BigText field.
I do not know about any other usefull features: I have not investigated HTML content parsing in depth. We are using FCKeditor, that does also produce valid XHTML content, that is why I was looking for a place to disable the content conversion :-)

Kind regards.


"Miles Tillinger" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

15.05.2006 11:03

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RE: XHTML compliance

 

 

 




Hi Sergiy,
 
I would like to avoid disabling either of the Web-site settings, but at this stage the only way I can get the code to be rendered XHTML compliant is by disabling the HTML Tidy option.
 
I checked config.xml and it is using the NekoHTMLParser.  I tried changing the output method to both ‘xml’ and ‘xhtml’ and neither had any effect.
 
The main problem I am seeing when testing on simple XHTML is that tags are rendered in uppercase.  With the HTML Tidy (Neko) option disabled in Jahia the markup is rendered exactly how it is saved by the Tiny MCE editor.  What benefit, if any, is there in running Neko over the content after it has already been formatted by Tiny MCE?
 
I am able to leave the Markup Filtering option disabled, I haven’t experienced any problems with that so far.  Is this the option that allows page link parsing?
 
Thanks,
 
Miles.
 

 



From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent:
Friday, May 12, 2006 4:51 PM
To:
[email protected]
Subject:
Re: XHTML compliance

 

Hello Miles,


there is several posibilities to achieve this.

The first one is to disable HTML content clean un and filtering via Jahia Administration GUI (as Jahia root user --> Server Administration --> HTML Editors --> Web-site settings --> Disable HTML clean up and Markup Filtering).


If you decide to leave content clean up and markup filtering enabled (we did so, bacause of other features, like page links parsing etc.) here is the second posibility. Check which HTML parser is configured in config.xml under the key 'org.jahia.services.htmlparser.HtmlParser'.

I'm using Jahia 4.1 branch and this property by me is set to 'org.jahia.services.htmlparser.NekoHtmlParser'.


Now if you open the source code of the NekoHtmlParser class, you could find the following line:

       serializer.setOutputProperty(OutputKeys.METHOD, "html");


If you change here the "html" to "xml", your HTML content will remain XHTML conform.

You could also tune other transformer settings (indent etc.) the way aou want.


The same applies to the 'org.jahia.services.htmlparser.TidyHtmlParser' implementation, if this one is configured in your config.xml.



Kind regards.

Sergiy.

"Miles Tillinger" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

08.05.2006 03:32

 

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XHTML compliance


 

 

 

 





Hi,

 
I am trying to enforce XHTML compliance on all fields, particularly BigText fields.  I’m trying to find where content submitted via BigText editor form has some changes applied, e.g.  tags converted to uppercase, <br /> converted to <BR>, trailing slash removed from <img … /> tags etc.   more detail:

 
The following code from TinyMCE editor:

 
this is a <br />page break       <img src="" border="0" />    
 
is ultimately stored as :

 
<html>this is a <BR>page break       <IMG border="0" src=""     </html>

 
 
I would like to disable the conversion to keep the content XHTML compliant (as is applied by the TinyMCE editor I am using).   Can you direct me to the right place in the source?

 
Regards,

 
Miles.

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