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author | friendica <info@friendica.com> | 2012-05-12 17:57:41 -0700 |
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committer | friendica <info@friendica.com> | 2012-07-18 20:40:31 +1000 |
commit | 7a40f4354b32809af3d0cfd6e3af0eda02ab0e0a (patch) | |
tree | a9c3d91209cff770bb4b613b1b95e61a7bbc5a2b /lib/htmlpurifier/docs/enduser-tidy.html | |
parent | cd727cb26b78a1dade09d510b071446898477356 (diff) | |
download | volse-hubzilla-7a40f4354b32809af3d0cfd6e3af0eda02ab0e0a.tar.gz volse-hubzilla-7a40f4354b32809af3d0cfd6e3af0eda02ab0e0a.tar.bz2 volse-hubzilla-7a40f4354b32809af3d0cfd6e3af0eda02ab0e0a.zip |
some important stuff we'll need
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diff --git a/lib/htmlpurifier/docs/enduser-tidy.html b/lib/htmlpurifier/docs/enduser-tidy.html new file mode 100644 index 000000000..a243f7fc2 --- /dev/null +++ b/lib/htmlpurifier/docs/enduser-tidy.html @@ -0,0 +1,231 @@ +<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> +<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" + "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd"> +<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en"><head> +<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" /> +<meta name="description" content="Tutorial for tweaking HTML Purifier's Tidy-like behavior." /> +<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="style.css" /> + +<title>Tidy - HTML Purifier</title> + +</head><body> + +<h1>Tidy</h1> + +<div id="filing">Filed under Development</div> +<div id="index">Return to the <a href="index.html">index</a>.</div> +<div id="home"><a href="http://htmlpurifier.org/">HTML Purifier</a> End-User Documentation</div> + +<p>You've probably heard of HTML Tidy, Dave Raggett's little piece +of software that cleans up poorly written HTML. Let me say it straight +out:</p> + +<p class="emphasis">This ain't HTML Tidy!</p> + +<p>Rather, Tidy stands for a cool set of Tidy-inspired features in HTML Purifier +that allows users to submit deprecated elements and attributes and get +valid strict markup back. For example:</p> + +<pre><center>Centered</center></pre> + +<p>...becomes:</p> + +<pre><div style="text-align:center;">Centered</div></pre> + +<p>...when this particular fix is run on the HTML. This tutorial will give +you the lowdown of what exactly HTML Purifier will do when Tidy +is on, and how to fine-tune this behavior. Once again, <strong>you do +not need Tidy installed on your PHP to use these features!</strong></p> + +<h2>What does it do?</h2> + +<p>Tidy will do several things to your HTML:</p> + +<ul> + <li>Convert deprecated elements and attributes to standards-compliant + alternatives</li> + <li>Enforce XHTML compatibility guidelines and other best practices</li> + <li>Preserve data that would normally be removed as per W3C</li> +</ul> + +<h2>What are levels?</h2> + +<p>Levels describe how aggressive the Tidy module should be when +cleaning up HTML. There are four levels to pick: none, light, medium +and heavy. Each of these levels has a well-defined set of behavior +associated with it, although it may change depending on your doctype.</p> + +<dl> + <dt>light</dt> + <dd>This is the <strong>lenient</strong> level. If a tag or attribute + is about to be removed because it isn't supported by the + doctype, Tidy will step in and change into an alternative that + is supported.</dd> + <dt>medium</dt> + <dd>This is the <strong>correctional</strong> level. At this level, + all the functions of light are performed, as well as some extra, + non-essential best practices enforcement. Changes made on this + level are very benign and are unlikely to cause problems.</dd> + <dt>heavy</dt> + <dd>This is the <strong>aggressive</strong> level. If a tag or + attribute is deprecated, it will be converted into a non-deprecated + version, no ifs ands or buts.</dd> +</dl> + +<p>By default, Tidy operates on the <strong>medium</strong> level. You can +change the level of cleaning by setting the %HTML.TidyLevel configuration +directive:</p> + +<pre>$config->set('HTML.TidyLevel', 'heavy'); // burn baby burn!</pre> + +<h2>Is the light level really light?</h2> + +<p>It depends on what doctype you're using. If your documents are HTML +4.01 <em>Transitional</em>, HTML Purifier will be lazy +and won't clean up your <code>center</code> +or <code>font</code> tags. But if you're using HTML 4.01 <em>Strict</em>, +HTML Purifier has no choice: it has to convert them, or they will +be nuked out of existence. So while light on Transitional will result +in little to no changes, light on Strict will still result in quite +a lot of fixes.</p> + +<p>This is different behavior from 1.6 or before, where deprecated +tags in transitional documents would +always be cleaned up regardless. This is also better behavior.</p> + +<h2>My pages look different!</h2> + +<p>HTML Purifier is tasked with converting deprecated tags and +attributes to standards-compliant alternatives, which usually +need copious amounts of CSS. It's also not foolproof: sometimes +things do get lost in the translation. This is why when HTML Purifier +can get away with not doing cleaning, it won't; this is why +the default value is <strong>medium</strong> and not heavy.</p> + +<p>Fortunately, only a few attributes have problems with the switch +over. They are described below:</p> + +<table class="table"> + <thead><tr> + <th>Element@Attr</th> + <th>Changes</th> + </tr></thead> + <tbody> + <tr> + <td>caption@align</td> + <td>Firefox supports stuffing the caption on the + left and right side of the table, a feature that + Internet Explorer, understandably, does not have. + When align equals right or left, the text will simply + be aligned on the left or right side.</td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td>img@align</td> + <td>The implementation for align bottom is good, but not + perfect. There are a few pixel differences.</td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td>br@clear</td> + <td>Clear both gets a little wonky in Internet Explorer. Haven't + really been able to figure out why.</td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td>hr@noshade</td> + <td>All browsers implement this slightly differently: we've + chosen to make noshade horizontal rules gray.</td> + </tr> + </tbody> +</table> + +<p>There are a few more minor, although irritating, bugs. +Some older browsers support deprecated attributes, +but not CSS. Transformed elements and attributes will look unstyled +to said browsers. Also, CSS precedence is slightly different for +inline styles versus presentational markup. In increasing precedence:</p> + +<ol> + <li>Presentational attributes</li> + <li>External style sheets</li> + <li>Inline styling</li> +</ol> + +<p>This means that styling that may have been masked by external CSS +declarations will start showing up (a good thing, perhaps). Finally, +if you've turned off the style attribute, almost all of +these transformations will not work. Sorry mates.</p> + +<p>You can review the rendering before and after of these transformations +by consulting the <a +href="http://htmlpurifier.org/live/smoketests/attrTransform.php">attrTransform.php +smoketest</a>.</p> + +<h2>I like the general idea, but the specifics bug me!</h2> + +<p>So you want HTML Purifier to clean up your HTML, but you're not +so happy about the br@clear implementation. That's perfectly fine! +HTML Purifier will make accomodations:</p> + +<pre>$config->set('HTML.Doctype', 'XHTML 1.0 Transitional'); +$config->set('HTML.TidyLevel', 'heavy'); // all changes, minus... +<strong>$config->set('HTML.TidyRemove', 'br@clear');</strong></pre> + +<p>That third line does the magic, removing the br@clear fix +from the module, ensuring that <code><br clear="both" /></code> +will pass through unharmed. The reverse is possible too:</p> + +<pre>$config->set('HTML.Doctype', 'XHTML 1.0 Transitional'); +$config->set('HTML.TidyLevel', 'none'); // no changes, plus... +<strong>$config->set('HTML.TidyAdd', 'p@align');</strong></pre> + +<p>In this case, all transformations are shut off, except for the p@align +one, which you found handy.</p> + +<p>To find out what the names of fixes you want to turn on or off are, +you'll have to consult the source code, specifically the files in +<code>HTMLPurifier/HTMLModule/Tidy/</code>. There is, however, a +general syntax:</p> + +<table class="table"> + <thead> + <tr> + <th>Name</th> + <th>Example</th> + <th>Interpretation</th> + </tr> + </thead> + <tbody> + <tr> + <td>element</td> + <td>font</td> + <td>Tag transform for <em>element</em></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td>element@attr</td> + <td>br@clear</td> + <td>Attribute transform for <em>attr</em> on <em>element</em></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td>@attr</td> + <td>@lang</td> + <td>Global attribute transform for <em>attr</em></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td>e#content_model_type</td> + <td>blockquote#content_model_type</td> + <td>Change of child processing implementation for <em>e</em></td> + </tr> + </tbody> +</table> + +<h2>So... what's the lowdown?</h2> + +<p>The lowdown is, quite frankly, HTML Purifier's default settings are +probably good enough. The next step is to bump the level up to heavy, +and if that still doesn't satisfy your appetite, do some fine-tuning. +Other than that, don't worry about it: this all works silently and +effectively in the background.</p> + +</body></html> + +<!-- vim: et sw=4 sts=4 +--> |