* update highlight.js to latest release v9.13.1
* update to v9.13.1 default.css
does the current default.css include adjustments for the different languages?
* Update highlight.pack.js
* Update readme.tid
* update highlight.pack to 9.15.6
* update version number + included languages
* add smartIndent config to codemirror
* add indentWithTabs config to codemirror
* make default tabSize same value as indentUnit
* make tab and enter do smart indentation
Previously, we were only using the path to disambiguate files on a file:// URI. That meant that all wikis on tiddlywiki.com was sharing the same pool of local storage...
From the readme:
This plugin enables TiddlyWiki to embed a modified copy of itself (an "innerwiki"). The primary motivation is to be able to produce screenshot illustrations that are automatically up-to-date with the appearance of TiddlyWiki as it changes over time, or to produce the same screenshot in different languages
It turns out that we don't need to disable any scroll anchoring done by the browser as our implementation of scroll anchoring will adapt itself.
Also removing an unneeded paragraph tag from the view template.
* Create howto.tid
Howto explains customising the languages supported by the highlight plugin. This involves:
* Using the highlight.js download page to get a zip archive containing the files for a highlight.js server which supports a set of languages selected by the user
* Replacing the highlight plugin's `highlight.pack.js` file with the `highlight.pack.js` file from the downloaded archive
* Update plugin.info
Add howto.
* fix for #3547
see https://developer.mozilla.org/de/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Object/defineProperty
because of "strict mode" - the `parentNode` property may not be writable and causes an error in `fakedom.js` (appendChild)
to reproduce: install CodeMirror, install "Tools for exploring internals of TW", open a heavy Tiddler like the Control-Panel in edit-mode, toggle preview on, switch to "parse tree" or "widget tree"
* check for tw fakedom
* use "text" config scheme
* use "text" config scheme
* use "text" config scheme
* use "text" config scheme
* use "text" config scheme
* use "text" config scheme
* use "text" config scheme
* use "text" config scheme
* use "text" config scheme + set type integer
* use "text" config scheme
* set type integer
* set type integer
AWS imposes a limit of 16MB in my testing for the payload of a lambda. Compressing it enables us to pass x2-3 more data, thanks to the inefficiencies of JSON