Back in 7d12d89a0a we added support for
Node.js global `Buffer` object, explicitly exposing it to the module
loader sandbox. The value `{}` was used in the browser, but is now
causing problems with libraries that perform feature detection.
TiddlyWiki passes the MIME type of the tiddler to highlight.js as the
"language brush", but it turns out that highlight.js doesn't actually
understand MIME types. This commit introduces a configuration mapping
between common MIME types and highlight.js language brushes
Fixes#2535
The old code required a space after the colon separating the title
fragment from the text, and didn’t trim the strings. The new code is
more tolerant, by not requiring the space, and trimming the strings.
This commit permits language plugins to carry the field
“text-direction” with the value “rtl” to trigger right-to-left layout
of the entire page. We also adjust the sidebar layout to work in RTL
mode.
There are still a number of problems to be addressed:
* Brackets and other punctuation incorrectly placed within en-GB UI text
* System tiddler titles are rendered semi-back-to-front (eg
`languages/ca-ES/:$`)
Starting to address #1845 and the discussion in #2523.
We were using `String.prototype.replace()` without addressing the
wrinkle that dollar signs in the replacement string have special
handling. This caused problems in situations where the replacement
string is derived from user input and contains dollar signs.
Fixes#2517
Fixes#2507
The problem stems from a JavaScript quirk: the fact that
`({“undefined":"Me"})[undefined]` returns “Me”. The quirk is that the
value `undefined` is coerced into the string “undefined” when used as
an index.
In this particular case, the code for `wiki.getTiddler()` was returning
the tiddler with the title `”undefined”` when called with the title set
to the value `undefined`. It happens that the pluginswitcher called
`wiki.getTiddler(undefined)`.