Use Bundler to manage RedCloth
gem. 4.x should be much faster
and less buggy. Unfortunately,
it doesn't support mixed
Textile/Markdown syntax. So
we keep an (appropriately
renamed) copy of 3.x around,
for the users of the "Mixed"
text filter.
I was fooled: Ruby 1.9 has ordered
hashes; 1.8 doesn't. So what I did
in Revision 689 works in Ruby 1.9,
but fails in 1.8.
Now we parse the POST params ourselves.
Monkey patch to prevent ActionCache from overriding
the correct content-type header, when serving cached
pages with a "." in the name. (Thanks to Jason Blevins)
Also sync with latest SVG-Edit.
Make use of a nonce for setting SVG-Edit IDs
option. By default, SVG-Edit behaves as before.
Calling svgCanvas.randomizeIds(true) gives our
behaviour, instead.
Also, sync with latest SVG-Edit (but disable,
for now, manual editing of IDs).
Fix http://bug.to/issues/show/335
and
http://bug.to/issues/show/334
We now bundle the uploaded files directory
(and the public/ directory for the (X)HTML
export) in the Zipball when exporting a Web.
Also, correct the Print View to produce proper links
uploaded files.
... is to settle these encoding issues
once and for all.
Let's override the accessor methods, which
seems to offer a simpler solution.
Now with tests (for whatever that helps)...
Move the truncate() method into ApplicationHelper.
Move another method around, for no particularly
good reason. Controllers really shouldn't have
public methods that don't correspond to actions.
Add a Source view. [Based on a suggestion by Andrew Stacey]
Fix a well-formedness bug in the list action, due to
boneheaded truncation algorithm. [Reported by Roby Bartels]
Omit a (seemingly superfluous)
javascript hack which causes
Gecko-based browsers to request
/my_wiki/s5/null
when they load an s5 slideshow.
Also a stylistic cleanup in
the wiki_controller.
When redirected to another page, flash
messages will not display if the query
string is longer than 10192 bytes. In
Instiki, certain rescue operations
involve redirection, with the updated
content of the page passed as a query
parameter. Fall back to using the stored
content (ie, don't pass a query parameter)
if the content is too long.
Previously, if the user tried to submit content which was
malformed utf-8, Instiki would complain loudly to him.
A slightly more user-friendly approach was suggested by
the latest Rails 2.3.4, and a conversation with Sam Ruby
(who suggested some improvements).
Now, instead of complaining, we remove the offending bytes,
leaving a well-formed utf-8 string, which we pretend is what
the user meant to submit.