I need to play with it some more. This is what I am seeing on the page called 'Project':
Project vs. Project Project.Footer vs. Project.Footer Project vs. Project Project vs. Project Project vs. Project Project vs. Project Project vs. Project Project vs. Project Project vs. Project Project vs. Project Project vs. LeftMenu Project vs. LeftMenu Project vs. LeftMenu Project vs. LeftMenuFooter I am printing out the name of the page vs. name of the real page. This page includes a couple other pages in it besides the left menu, etc., but clearly the filter is called multiple times per page. I suppose through trial-and-error I can figure out which of the multiple times is the place on the screen I want, but is there not a more reliable means? -- Bobman On Thu, Mar 5, 2009 at 6:10 PM, Janne Jalkanen <[email protected]>wrote: > > Compare the value from wikiContext.getPage() and wikiContext.getRealPage() > and you should be able to figure out when you're on the main content page > ;-) > > (this is becoming an FAQ, someone just asked about this a few days ago...) > > /Janne > > > On Mar 5, 2009, at 21:36 , Bob Paige wrote: > > I am trying to write a page filter that adds something to the content >> frame >> of the page. How can I detect when the filter is being called for the >> content? >> >> If I have the filter add its text every time it is called, the text shows >> up >> next to the login name, the left menu page, etc., etc. :) >> >> I tried setting a context variable to make sure I only process it once per >> page, but I'm still left with knowing when. >> >> -- >> Bobman >> > >
