> Great! Can't believe it.

This is what I love about Trac. It's the most malleable tool of its
kind that I've ever used. The approach of having a very simple but
extensible core makes it really really easy to add new capabilities.
For the most part you can just install it and use it as is. And if you
need fancier stuff there's frequently a plug-in and if not... it's not
too difficult to write one once you've got the hang of it. I've only
had to write a few plug-ins from scratch (this Spoiler macro and
another to support Scrippets[1]... that got some feature creep and
turned into a renderer for Final Draft Pro documents). Other than that
I've just been able to use stuff as is... and in a few cases hat to
fix some bugs or update them to support a newer version of Trac.

Out of curiosity... what are you doing with Trac that you need a
Spoiler Reveal/Hide capability? I've been using Trac as a base for
doing film production planning and we have some content where we
wanted to use spoiler text to hide things from people who don't want
to get spoiled to the story while we're still doing development. We
had been using that span macro approach I mentioned before... but we
didn't like it. This was a good excuse to fix that.

Hopefully your sysadmin will install this for you soon and you can benefit. :-)

Ben
[1] http://trac-hacks.org/wiki/ScrippetMacro

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