* extend ListWidget to enforce classes
Previously, the undocumented *class* attribute only allowed to specify
additional classes to be set.
Especially for use within a LinkCatcher, you can now apply / enforce
only the custom classes and avoid any of the defaults being applied
depending on the link target.
This will allow to implement #1161 more gracefully.
* use setClass insted of exclamation mark syntax
update docs & fix typo in docs
This change makes it possible to perform the conversion from target
tiddler title to `href` value as a filter expression (previously a
JavaScript macro was needed to use the tv-get-export-link variable)
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
The tabindex attribute was being set to the string “undefined” if the
attribute was not specified. The fix is to only set the tabindex
attribute if the attribute was specified.
tv-get-export-path tells render tiddlers where to export files
tv-get-export-image-link tells images.js where to look for images
tv-get-export-link tells tells link.js where to look for links to other
exported tiddlers
This reverts commit b2b8006b58, reversing
changes made to e7e16137b2.
@welford my apologies it turns out there are a couple of problems, I’ll
comment more on the pull request
Fixes#1415
The problem was that encodeURI() doesn’t encode slashes, which are not
legal in a data URI, although only Safari was failing. We switch to
encodeURIComponent(), which does encode slashes
fixes#592
Introduces and preserves **_origin** field when using drag-and-drop —
bad idea? discard? different field name?
demo http://592.tiddlyspot.com
Dragging a tiddler link into a tiddler editor, or outside the browser
into another app, will now add double square brackets around the title
if it includes spaces. Suggested by @tgirod.
I’m not 100% sure about this change. It breaks one habit that I had
developed: typing `[[sometext|]]` and then dragging a title in between
the vertical bar and the first closing square bracket. What do others
think?
There are still some warnings about making functions in a loop, but
I’ll fix those as a separate pull request because the fixes are more
than typographic errors.