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mirror of https://github.com/Jermolene/TiddlyWiki5 synced 2024-11-27 12:07:19 +00:00

More details of parsing and rendering added to readme

This commit is contained in:
Jeremy Ruston 2011-12-16 10:48:09 +00:00
parent 50e11a0da8
commit d3ede70757

View File

@ -369,3 +369,76 @@ Cooks a TiddlyWiki HTML file from the recipe and returns it as a string.
#### recipe.cookRss()
Cooks a TiddlyWiki RSS file from the recipe and returns it as a string.
## Parsing and rendering wiki text
Wiki text is parsed into a simple object tree format. The parser doesn't need access to a WikiStore, nor does it need to know which tiddler, if any, the text it is parsing came from. This means that the parse tree can be cached within a tiddler when needed, and that parse trees can exist independently of tiddlers and WikiStores.
Rendering converts the parse tree into a textual format. The process requires access to a WikiStore so that it can resolve references to other tiddlers. It also needs to know which tiddler to use as the context for rendering the parse tree - this is the tiddler that is referenced by the `<<view>>` macro, for example.
### Parse tree format
The parse tree described here is defined as part of the WikiTextParser; other text processors could choose to represent their parse trees differently. However, it is hoped that this format is a sufficiently generic, transparent representation of HTML (and SVG) that it could be used by many other parsers, allowing the rendering engine, and macro processing, to be shared across parsers.
HTML elements are represented as:
{type: "div", attributes: {
attr1: value,
style: {
name: value,
name2: value2
}
}, children: [
{child},
{child},
]}
Text nodes are represented as:
{type: "text", value: "string of text node"}
Macros are represented as:
{type: "macro", name: "macroname", params: "parameter string", output: [<outputtree]}
Note that the macro output is only added to the tree during rendering.
The parse tree can also contain context frames:
{type: "context", tiddler: "title", children: [<childnodes>]}
Context frames are explained further in the section on rendering below.
### Rendering process
Wiki text rendering requires:
* the MIME type of the target format (currently `text/plain` or `text/html`)
* the parse tree to be rendered
* the WikiStore object to be used for resolving references to other tiddlers
* the title of the tiddler to use as the rendering context
The rendering process is to recursively scan the parse tree and stitch together the fragments making up the HTML elements corresponding to the nodes of the tree.
Macros are executed during rendering, which involves invoking the named macro handler with the macro parameter string, and a reference to the parse tree node for the macro. The handler then inserts the output parse tree into the `output` member of the macro node.
The `<<tiddler>>` macro doesn't change the tiddler context for its children. This means that when you transclude a tiddler, any `<<view>>` macros within it reference the fields of the tiddler that did the transcluding.
The list macro uses transcluding in a slightly different way as a form of templating. For example:
<<list all template:MyTiddler>>
Here, `MyTiddler` specifies the information that should be displayed about each tiddler. In this example, there is a link to the tiddler, a link to the author, and the modification date:
<<view title link>>, <<view modifier link>>, <<view modified "YYYY MM DD">>
In order to ensure that the correct target is used for these view macros, the `<<list>>`` macro creates a context frame around each list item:
{type: "li", children: [
{type: "context", tiddler: "FirstTiddler", children: [
{type: "macro", name: "view", params: "title link"},
{type: "macro", name: "view", params: "modifier link"},
{type: "macro", name: "view", params: "modified \"YYYY MM DD\""}
]}
]}