element that has scrollbars. The wrapper element with the
scroll bar does not need to be a direct parent of the text area.
**update:** fixed a bug that came up in the discussion
This is fixed now: https://github.com/Jermolene/TiddlyWiki5/pull/1933#issuecomment-141774881
The problem was the check in getScrollContainer()
@felixhayashi sorry I should have realised earlier that it’s worth
doing it this way so that we can have different settings for different
story rivers.
Using `$name` and `$value` attributes allows more flexibility in how
parameter names are specified, allowing parameter names that are not
valid attribute names.
It thereby reduces code complexity that would arise when setting
many variables using "<$set>".
```
\define helloworld() Hello world!
<$vars greeting="Hi" me={{!!title}} sentence=<<helloworld>>>
<<greeting>>! I am <<me>> and I say: <<sentence>>
</$vars>
```
How this Widget differs from the set widget:
* Variables may be created by using the "key=value" notation
that you already know from widgets like action-setfield.
* You cannot specify a fallback ("emptyValue")
* You cannot use a filter to produce a conditional variable assignement
Original discussion that led to the creation of this widget:
https://github.com/Jermolene/TiddlyWiki5/issues/1610
Allow widgets to choose not to propagate actions. This is important for
widgets that themselves trigger actions.
Note that this change will cause problems with any existing
5.1.8-prerelease plugins that call `invokeActions()`.
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