I think these look awesome. And I think it's meaningful that I've
been pointing people to this page all day while having conversations
about components.
Wonderful work y'all.
Jess
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Jess Mitchell
Project Manager / Fluid Project
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
/ w / 617.326.7753 / c / 919.599.5378
jabber: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.fluidproject.org
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
On Sep 3, 2008, at 3:19 PM, Justin wrote:
Hello,
I've broken the progress indicators out into child pages of their
respective components. To put one on a page you just need to use the
{include} tag. You can see an example of this by going to the http://wiki.fluidproject.org/display/fluid/Component+Progress+Indicator
page, where they are all compiled using the {include} tag.
You will also notice some styling differences. As per Alisson's
suggestion I have made the words, in the table, links. The
indicators themselves are different now, thanks to some code from
Jacob.
Thanks
Justin
On 3-Sep-08, at 1:01 PM, Jonathan Hung wrote:
That's what I was getting at. Using child pages with {excerpt},
{excerpt-include}, or even {include} tags is the way to go.
Of course it'd be easier if we can have it all in one place (as per
Jess' question), but not with our current wiki version.
I wonder if we're ever going to revisit that upgrade...
- Jonathan.
On Wed, Sep 3, 2008 at 12:49 PM, Anastasia Cheetham <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
On 3-Sep-08, at 12:31 PM, Jonathan Hung wrote:
Unfortunately there isn't a good way to have one page of content
and have sections of that content replicated elsewhere. The wiki
doesn't have that functionality.
What I have been trying with the options parameters for the
component apis is this:
Place each progress indicator on a separate page (perhaps a child
of its component home page) and put the {excerpt} tags around it.
Then, anywhere else you want to display the progress indicator
(including the component home page), you can include that excerpt.
It's not ideal, but at least you only have one actual indicator,
and it can be displayed in multiple places.
--
Anastasia Cheetham [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Software Designer, Fluid Project http://fluidproject.org
Adaptive Technology Resource Centre / University of Toronto
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