There are other ways we could add maths to TW5 (including @EvanBalster's awesome https://github.com/EvanBalster/TiddlyWikiFormula) but the approach here has the merit of simplicity because it reuses the existing filter evaluation mechanism. That means that it's not ordinary "2+2" maths, it's a unique list processing language...
Docs to come
Fixes#254
* Fix search method for search tokens spread across fields
Addresses GH #3636, which reports that if you're searching for "test
body", and "test" only appears in the title field, and "body" only appears
in the text field, 5.1.18's search method won't yield that tiddler as a
result, which appears to be a regression from the 5.1.17 behavior
* Add test for searching for multiple tokens across fields
Verifies GH #3636:
> If I create a tiddler in the empty edition with the title "Test tiddler" and content "Body content", searching the wiki for "test body" yields no results under either "title matches" or "all matches". Searching for either word individually turns up "Test tiddler", and repeating this in an empty wiki I created from the 5.1.17 tag causes "Test tiddler" to show up under "all matches".
* Added better handling for sortByList manual placements
If manual placement specifications show up in an inconvenient order,
sortByList, will go to the trouble of processing them in that order.
* Added tests to confirm solution to (#3296)
...That custom tag ordering will not choke when tiddlers get sorted after their dependencies have been placed around them
* Corrected list-after bug when referencing external titles
* Using more error-proof $tw.utils.hop in sortByList
* minor indentation correction in test-tags.js
They don’t get automatically decoded when the browser reads the
resulting HTML. So, instead, we’ll solve
1e9e1a1fdc by switching to double quotes
for attribute values.
Also added a “description” field for wiki folders.
Right now there’s too many editions listed. I think we should by
default only list editions whose `tiddlywiki.info` file has
`showInListings` set to `true`, and have an `--editions all` command
that lists everything.
@pmario please could you check that the editions in your
`TIDDLYWIKI_EDITION_PATH` are correctly listed?
Fixes#82.
The old behaviour was to parse the content of a widget or html element
in block mode if the opening tag was followed by a line break. The new
behaviour requires two line breaks.
This makes it possible to include linebreaks more liberally within
wikitext, although care must still be taken to only use double line
breaks when the block mode behaviour is desired.
The code change here is very simple, just a single line change in
html.js. Most of the other changes are to convert various single line
breaks into double line breaks.
In some timezones, (eg GMT+6) the modified timestamps for the
'TiddlerOne' and 'Tiddler Three' test tiddlers were actually on
the same day. This was causing the 'eachday' filter test to fail.
Similar to the fix in commit 8487221, this just adjusts the
timestamp to ensure the test passes in any timezone.
In certain timezones, 201304151312 UTC is not actually the same day
as 201304152219 any 201304151756. This was causing the test for the
'sameday' filter operator to fail. (I'm in GMT+10).
This is a quick-fix. I've just adjusted the timestamps to be close
together so they will be same day no matter what timezone you're in.
One consequence of wikifying macro attributes before use was that we
couldn’t have tiddler titles with wikitext syntax in, which was
definitely a problem.
Getting rid of the old widget mechanism files finally gives us a payoff
for all the refactoring. Still a bit of tidying up to do, and we need
to re-introduce the animation mechanisms.
The purpose is to allow attributes to be specified as macro
invocations. For example `<div myattr=<<mymacro param1 param3>>>`. The
parser needed sprucing up in order to copy with the nesting of angle
brackets. The refactoring has been done with an eye on using the same
technique in the filter expression parser (which is pretty messy at the
moment -- it throws exceptions for syntax errors, which is bad). Later
I'm hoping to extend the technique to create a more flexible table
parser.