plugin_wiki has such thing but not auth.wiki. In auth wiki all pages are public unless you do
auth.wiki(manage_permissions=True) If you set manage_permissions=True all pages are private but the author can choose the names of the groups who can read or write it. You can use the "everybody" group to make it public. On Sunday, 9 September 2012 18:19:30 UTC-5, Andrew W wrote: > > I've looked for the magic is_public button, but I can't find it. > > > On Sunday, September 9, 2012 3:57:28 AM UTC+12, villas wrote: >> >> Just a thought, but doesn't the wiki page have an is_public field? If >> so, did you tick it? >> >> >> >> On Saturday, September 8, 2012 9:41:35 AM UTC+1, Andrew W wrote: >>> >>> Just Checking, were you logged in when you tried to open up the page ? >>> Just to clarify, if I'm logged in it will take me directly to the page - >>> as expected. I wanted to test having pages available to users who haven't >>> logged in - which for this case would be most people - the public. I >>> opened a new browser window, made sure I wasn't logged in to web2py, and >>> pasted in the url of my new page. I get the login screen. >>> >>> I've just tried it again at home, creating just a simple page (OK, I did >>> add an extra css file to the layout). >>> >>> Screen shot attached of page (when logged in), and screen when I paste >>> in the url. >>> >>> Apart from that, auth.wiki is looking great. I'm experimenting with >>> adding blocks with extra classes, allowing me to style them differently. >>> Can I specify classes to other elements, or is it just blockquotes ? >>> >>> P.S. I'm getting a small S in the menu bar (app created from Welcome >>> with no changes to menu) - see screen shot >>> >>> Thanks >>> >>> >>> On Saturday, September 8, 2012 7:42:22 AM UTC+12, Massimo Di Pierro >>> wrote: >>>> >>>> Strange. It should work even without url=True. You should be able to >>>> paste any URL in markmin and it should work. >>>> >>>> MARKMIN(text, url=True) >>>> >>>> simply allows you to user the shortcuts @/app/controller/function/args >>>> and they will be converted in http://..../app/controller/function/args >>>> where app, controller and function are optional. You can do @///index for >>>> example. >>>> >>>> On Friday, 7 September 2012 14:15:31 UTC-5, Andrew W wrote: >>>>> >>>>> No I didn't. Only just found out about URL=True. Di I pass as a URL >>>>> variable ? >>>> >>>> --

