Settings for WysiwygPlugin that are common to most editor integrations
WYSIWYG_EXCLUDE - Prevent WYSIWYG editing
The
global preference setting WYSIWYG_EXCLUDE
can be set to make the plugin sensitive to what is in a topic, before allowing it to be edited. The comma separated list to fall back to text edit can include:
-
html
- HTML tags (e.g. <div>
, not including <br>), or
-
macros
- simple macros (e.g. %VAR%
) or
-
calls
- macros with parameters e.g. %MACRO{...}%
-
pre
blocks (<pre>
)
- HTML
comments
(<!--
... -->
)
-
script
= inline HTML Script tags - default
-
style
= inline Css style tags - default
-
table
= inline html tables (=<table ..>. TML tables are not excluded)
If the plugin detects an excluded construct in the topic, it will refuse to allow the edit and will redirect to the default editor.
WYSIWYG_EDITABLE_CALLS - Exceptions to WYSIWYG_EXCLUDE
If you excluded
calls
in
WYSIWYG_EXCLUDE
, you can still define a subset of macros that do
not block edits. this is done in the
global preference setting WYSIWYG_EDITABLE_CALLS
, which should be a list of macro names separated by vertical bars, with no spaces, e.g:
* Set WYSIWYG_EDITABLE_CALLS = COMMENT|CALENDAR|INCLUDE
You should set
WYSIWYG_EXCLUDE
and
WYSIWYG_EDITABLE_CALLS
in
SitePreferences, or in
WebPreferences for each web.
WYSIWYGPLUGIN_PROTECT_EXISTING_TAGS - Protect specific tags originally in the topic text
The
WYSIWYGPLUGIN_PROTECT_EXISTING_TAGS
preference tells the translator
that certain HTML tags which were originally in the topic text should
remain as HTML tags;
the translator will not try to convert them to TML. This protects the tags
themselves, and not the contents enclosed between the
<tag>
and
</tag>
The default setting for this preference is defined within the plugin.
It corresponds to
div, span
.
This feature may be disabled by setting the preference to a single comma.
Thi does
not guarantee that HTML markup will be removed; the conversion
of HTML tags to TML markup remains subject to the other controls provided
by the WysiwygPlugin, including the
WYSIWYGPLUGIN_STICKYBITS
preference,
<sticky>
blocks,
<literal>
blocks and the rules applied
to tables and lists.
WYSIWYGPLUGIN_PROTECT_TAG_BLOCKS - Protect specific tag blocks originally in the topic text
The
WYSIWYGPLUGIN_PROTECT_TAG_BLOCKS
preference tells the translator
that certain HTML tag blocks which were originally in the topic text should
remain as HTML blocks;
the translator will not try to convert them to TML.
The default setting for this preference is defined within the plugin.
It corresponds to
script, style
.
As an example, individual html tables can be protected by surrounding them
with =<sticky> .. </sticky> block. However,if you want to have all
=<table> markup preserved as entered into topics by default, rather than subject to
WYSIWYG editing, add
table
to this list, and =<table> markup will become
automatically sticky.
This feature may be disabled by setting the preference to a single comma.
You can define the global preference
WYSIWYGPLUGIN_STICKYBITS
to stop the
plugin from ever trying to convert specific HTML tags into
TML when certain specific attributes are present on the tag. This is most
useful when you have styling or alignment information in tags that must be
preserved.
This
preference setting is used to tell the translator which attributes, when present
on a tag, make it "stick" i.e. block conversion back to TML.
For example, setting it to
table=background,lang;tr=valign
will stop the translator from trying to
convert any table
tag that has background
or lang
attributes, and any
tr
tag that has a valign
attribute back to Foswiki | table | column |
markup (regardless of where that table
tag comes from).
This setting is used only after the page has been processed by the editor. If
the editor does not support a particular tag or attribute and the editor corrupts the
tag, this setting will not be helpful. It is only used to prevent
an HTML tag from being converted back to TML.
Format of the setting is
tag1=attrib,attrib;tag2=attrib
. Attributes delimited by
comma, and tags delimited by semicolon.
- The left side of the equal sign is the tag.
- The right side of the equal sign is a comma delimited list of attributes to be matched.
If a matching tag is found, that matches any of the attributes listed,
the tag will not be converted back to TML.
You can use perl regular expressions to match tag and attribute names, so
.*=id,on.*
will ensure that any tag with an id or
on*
event handler is kept as
HTML.
Note: HTML has been gradually deprecating HTML attributes, replacing
them with equivalent styles. For example, the table, row and cell background
color attribute:
bgcolor="#123456"
has been deprecated, replaced with
style="background-color: #123456;"
A limited subset of tags (
table, th, tr, td
) will match against both the
attributes and the style components. Styles have been added to the default
setting.
The default setting for this preference are hard coded in the plugin. If you
wish to change the settings, the following list is the default setting coded
in the plugin:
* Set WYSIWYGPLUGIN_STICKYBITS =
(?!IMG).*=id,lang,title,dir,on.*;
A=accesskey,coords,shape,target;
BDO=dir;
BR=clear;
COL=char,charoff,span,valign,width;
COLGROUP=align,char,charoff,span,valign,width;
DIR=compact;
DIV=align,style;
DL=compact;
FONT=size,face;
H[0-9]=align;
HR=align,noshade,size,width;
LEGEND=accesskey,align;
LI=value;
OL=compact,start,type;
P=align;
PARAM=name,type,value,valuetype;
PRE=width;
Q=cite;
TABLE=align,bgcolor,.*?background-color:.*,frame,rules,summary,width;
TBODY=align,char,charoff,valign;
TD=abbr,align,axis,bgcolor,.*?background-color:.*,.*?border-color:.*,char,charoff,headers,height,nowrap,rowspan,scope,valign,width;
TFOOT=align,char,charoff,valign;
TH=abbr,align,axis,bgcolor,.*?background-color:.*,char,charoff,height,nowrap,rowspan,scope,valign,width,headers;
THEAD=align,char,charoff,valign;
TR=bgcolor,.*?background-color:.*,char,charoff,valign;
UL=compact,type
If you edit using the plain-text editor, you can use the <sticky>..</sticky> tags to delimit HTML (or TML) that you do
not want to be WYSIWYG edited.