Hi Vincent,

On Tue, Nov 18, 2008 at 5:51 PM, Vincent Massol <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>
> On Nov 18, 2008, at 1:03 PM, Vincent Massol wrote:
>
> [snip]
> >>>>>> WDYT?
> >>>>> We should not try to let through every URL, but just a few we
> >>>>> are sure
> >>>>> are working: http, https, ftp, mailto. For the others, there's
> >>>>> always
> >>>>> copy/paste.
> >>>>
> >>>> I don't quite agree.
> >>>>
> >>>> I should be able to enter a skype URL for example and since you can
> >>>> register any type of URL in your browser we can't filter them.
> >>>>
> >>>> What we could do though is test for the URL validity and if not
> >>>> valid
> >>>> then don't consider the element as a link. That is not very easy to
> >>>> implement but possible. I'm not sure I prefer this over
> >>>> displaying an
> >>>> inline error.
> >>>>
> >>>
> >>> Well, this time the user didn't do anything wrong.
> >>
> >> I don't agree. He did not follow the defined wiki syntax so he did
> >> something wrong and we need to tell him/her.
> >>
> >>> It just happened that
> >>> the document contained an italic text after ':'. He will see the
> >>> error
> >>> and think that XWiki is faulty, not that he did something wrong. I
> >>> certainly wouldn't like to receive such an error after importing a
> >>> "simple" document.
> >>
> >> The import is a different matter. I was talking about the wiki
> >> syntax here. For the import I don't understand since you'll never
> >> get a link if you the original document didn't have a <a href="">
> >> element so this can't happen since it'll be considered as text.
> >
> > Ok I understand now. It's imported as text and saved in wiki syntax
> > as normal text. When rendered later in XHTML it's parsed again and
> > then this time considered an inline element and rendered accordingly.
> >
> > So the real solution is that the XHTML parser should either generate
> > a verbatim block event or simply escape the ":" with "\:".
> >
> > I'll add a unit test for this to see how it goes.
>
> Actually this is working fine. Here's the test:
>
>
> .#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> .input|xhtml/1.0
>
> .#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> <html>something://whatever</html>
> .#-----------------------------------------------------
> .expect|event
> .#-----------------------------------------------------
> beginDocument
> beginParagraph
> onWord [something]
> onSpecialSymbol [:]
> onEscape [/]
> onEscape [/]
> onWord [whatever]
> endParagraph
> endDocument
> .#-----------------------------------------------------
> .expect|xwiki
> .#-----------------------------------------------------
> something:~/~/whatever
>
>
> So I don't know what's wrong. Asiri could you dig?


This test case doesn't address the problem we are facing. The input should
be xwiki/2.0 not html.

As I said before, the html input is :

<p>Par exemple:<i>#if($context.user == «XWiki.Admin»)Vous êtes
l'administrateur par défaut de ce wiki!#else Vous êtes un utilisateur
classique.#end</i></p>

And this get's converted into xwiki/2.0 syntax as :

Par exemple://#if($context.user == «XWiki.Admin»)Vous êtes l'administrateur
par défaut de ce wiki!#else Vous êtes un utilisateur classique.#end//

This is where the url like format appears .

Thanks.

- Asiri


>
>
> Maybe we should ask Guillaume whether he entered this manually after
> the import? :)
>
> Thanks
> -Vincent
> _______________________________________________
> devs mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://lists.xwiki.org/mailman/listinfo/devs
>
_______________________________________________
devs mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.xwiki.org/mailman/listinfo/devs

Reply via email to