> I have recently subscribed to this list and I wanted to introduce myself.
> 
> I have been working as a student on the 2011 edition of the Google
> Summer of Code on a MediaWiki parser [1] for the Mozilla Foundation.
> My mentor is Erik Rose.

...which probably means I should introduce myself as well. :-)

Hi! I'm Erik Rose, and I work on support.mozilla.com, where we keep thousands 
of support articles in a variant of MediaWiki syntax. Even outside Wikipedia 
itself (though no doubt driven by it), MW syntax has such a huge mindshare that 
our volunteers pretty much demanded it. At the moment, we use basically a 
straight port of the PHP to Python and then build painfully Byzantine layers 
around it to implement some custom syntax. Our summer project is to simplify 
this mess by building the most comprehensible, extensible MW parser available 
for Python:

* You'll be able to plug your own custom syntax bits into it without messing 
with the code.
* You can get the raw AST if you like. Or you can pass in transformation 
functions to customize the output of various nodes.
* We'll also provide hooks so you can do whatever you want with MW "product" 
features like includes, templates, and such (as opposed to pure "language" 
features).

As Peter already mentioned, our project's home is 
https://github.com/erikrose/mediawiki-parser. Or you might look at Peter's 
fork. Sometimes his is more up-to-date, sometimes mine.

We have most of the productions working now. Peter's working on templates at 
the moment, which are probably going to involve a pre-parsing phase, and then 
it's on to apostrophes, which I'm hoping we can rip off other people's work 
for. :-)

It's great to see other folks thinking about the language. I'm sure we'll talk 
soon!

Erik Rose
_______________________________________________
Wikitext-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikitext-l

Reply via email to