Has anybody tried to integrate Textile by Dean Allen (maker of Textpattern) into CMSMS?
While I was working with CMSMS for the last few days I found it hard to get a standard compliant webpage up and running by using TinyMCE or even xStandard-Editor. Both work great, but they mess with special characters and obviously they delete them instead of converting them to HTML-entities. That is really sad. But that was OT and has nothing to do with Textile which I just like to use because it allows quick and easy writing, especially in the news module.
Textile
Re: Textile
I have notfied the makers if XStandard of this problem and it should be solved in the near future. You should also make sure to use UTF-8 encoding throughout....or even xStandard-Editor. Both work great, but they mess with special characters and obviously they delete them instead of converting them to HTML-entities
Re: Textile
dfritschy,
thanks for notifying the developers of XStandard of this problem. I can not stick to UTF-8 in some cases. I would have done so, if it was possible. But some user agents to not display utf-8 correctly.
thanks for notifying the developers of XStandard of this problem. I can not stick to UTF-8 in some cases. I would have done so, if it was possible. But some user agents to not display utf-8 correctly.
Re: Textile
hi,
i also think that this feature would be very great.
here is a link: http://textism.com/tools/textile/index.html
i also think that this feature would be very great.
here is a link: http://textism.com/tools/textile/index.html
Re: Textile
I've only been testing CMSMS for a few days, but I'd like to cast my vote for a Textile module, too. (Markdown would also be great!)
Re: Textile
I would definatly love this... If anyone is interested in taking it on, I would gladly give some guidance into how I think it would work pretty efficiently.
Re: Textile
how do you think to do it?
i am very new to cmsms but i think about three methods:
1. a smarty-block-plugin:
{textile}
h1. this is the header
and i am the paragraph
{/textile}
pro: very dynamic just allow it on special places
con: tryed it. but had problems to include the class inside this smarty plugin
2. a smarty-outputfilter
pro: you don't need to change the code, so you can change the textile-markup very easy
con: don't know how. but i think this would be the best smarty solution.
3. as "WYSIWYG"-Editor
direct conversion of the textile-markup to html.
con: you can't edit the textile-markup because you only have the output-html
i would maybe do it if it doesnt need to much time to write because i have my intermediate examination in a few weeks....
i am very new to cmsms but i think about three methods:
1. a smarty-block-plugin:
{textile}
h1. this is the header
and i am the paragraph
{/textile}
pro: very dynamic just allow it on special places
con: tryed it. but had problems to include the class inside this smarty plugin
2. a smarty-outputfilter
pro: you don't need to change the code, so you can change the textile-markup very easy
con: don't know how. but i think this would be the best smarty solution.
3. as "WYSIWYG"-Editor
direct conversion of the textile-markup to html.
con: you can't edit the textile-markup because you only have the output-html
i would maybe do it if it doesnt need to much time to write because i have my intermediate examination in a few weeks....
Re: Textile
Yesterday I stumbled upon a thread about Markdown where it was used as a modifier ... should work with Textile as well.
Regards
Nils
Regards
Nils