Default with no suffix is pre-5.1.23 behavior, escaping all Unicode
characters for maximum compatibility (avoids encoding issues). New
"rawunicode" suffix allows passing through Unicode characters U+0080
and up unchanged, for cases where you know your tools are handling
encoding correctly and you want less verbose escaping.
* Extend toggle operator to support optional second operand to toggle a value pair
* Added tests for extended toggle filter
* Updated docs for toggle operator
* Add suffix and parameter to trim operator
Fixes#4809
* Unit tests for new trim operator parameters
* Mention trim operator in 5.1.23 release notes
* Address review comments
* Move regex escaping into utils.js trim functions
This way the trimPrefix and trimSuffix functions from utils.js are safe
to call without regex-escaping their parameters, which should make them
easier to use from other parts of the Javascript code.
* The `!has[tags]` filter didn't work because "tags" is an array
The negated `has` filter only considered empty strings, but not empty
arrays (such as the `tags` field).
* Add tests for `has` filter operator with array-like fields (tags, list)
* add a new-line before the log text to increase readability of the test output
* make eslint, jslint happy
* extend fields-widget with include/exclude/sort/reverse and fields-filter with include and exclude params plus DOCS
* remove new-line
* remove eslint settings
* restore old eslint settings
* remove typo
* add escapecss filter
this filter would allow creating valid css classes from titles containing special characters
we assign a class to an element using `encodeuricomponent[]` so that the class name is encoded
in a stylesheet we create the classname by `<title>escapecss[]` which applies the uri encoding and escapes characters that need to be escaped
* Update encodings.js
* refactor tagToCssSelector, add escapeCssSelector
* use escapeCssSelector
* escape using CSS.escape if it's available
* Update encodings.js
* revert factoring out escapeCssSelector
* First pass at modular wiki indexes
An exploratory experiment
* Fix tests
* Faster checking for existence of index methods
We don't really need to check the type
* Use the index for the has operator
* Fix typo
* Move iterator index methods into indexer modules
Now boot.js doesn't know the core indexers
* Fix up the other iterator index functions
* Fix crash with missing index branch
* Limit the field indexer to values less than 128 characters
* Fallback to the old manual scan if the index method returns null
* Sadly, we can no longe re-use the field indexer to accelerate the `has` operator, because the index now omits tiddlers that have field values longer than the limit
Still need to make the index configuration exposed somehow
* Rearrange tests so that we can test with and without indexers
We also need to expose the list of enabled indexers as a config option
* Test the field indexer with different length fields
So that we test the indexed and non-indexed codepaths
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
* Refactored the is operator for simplicity and efficiency.
* Improve `is` filter documentation.
* Update is.js
* extracted `subops.length` to `num_of_subops`
* renamed `subop` to `operator` for clarity/differentiation from `subops`
* refactored to avoid using a `Set` object.
* Update is.js
* Modify the is operator to allow multiple types to be specified.
* Fixed indentation.
* Fixed indentation.
* Rewritten to maintain input order when multiple filters provided.
* Updated documentation.
* Update is.tid
* fixed the "0 is not a number bug" in listops and x-listops
* Fixed one comment
* "default" is not a good name for a variable
* Following code styles.
Moving getInt to utils.
* Removing unwanted spaces introduced by me
Spending a bit more time with Chrome dev tools, and further to 254e1ca, this optimisation reduces the rendering time for the sample TOC from 1.9s to about 0.9s...
I used this test:
console.time();for(var t=0; t<200; t++)
{$tw.wiki.filterTiddlers("[all[tiddlers+shadows]sameday[20170210]]");};c
onsole.timeEnd()
Before this patch, I got speeds of approx 190ms, versus 140ms
afterwards.
Note that the ability to add a cache property like this is only
possible because tiddler objects are immutable.
given a list `A B C D` if I run `A B C D +[move:-1 [A]]` I get `B C A D`. However, if I were to do `A B C D +[move:1[D]]` it doesn't wrap around, and I get `A B C D`. This fixes that such that `A B C D +[move:-1 [A]]` gives 'A B C D`
* return all wikiparserrules w/o operand
* simpler layout & code / updated instruction details
Also wanted to link each rule to the official docs using a dictionary at
`$:/language/Docs/ParserRules/`. However, without #2194 this is not
doable.
* Change the negation logic to address an edge case
Make it possible to get an interval ending with yesterday or starting with tomorrow.
* "days" filter: adjust documentation
List fields (such as tags) when evaluated to produce tiddlers result in empty arrays. Using the exact not equals, an empty array is not the same as an empty string. By using equivelent not equals, we state that the field is either != "" or anything that can be coerced to "". Which, based on https://dorey.github.io/JavaScript-Equality-Table/ is `false` `0` `[]` or `[[]]`` neither `false` nor `0` can be set as a tiddler field as both will end up being quoted (`"false"`, `"0"`) so this should work.