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24.11.2024 09:26 Uhr | bch / MarkupVariables |
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authors (intermediate) This page describes the "variables" that are available in the markup through the construction Note: These variables do not necessarily exist in the PHP code, i.e. you cannot assume that using Here are the variables that are available through markup: {$Group} - page's group name, as in "PmWiki"
{$Groupspaced} - spaced group name, as in "Pm Wiki"
{$DefaultGroup} - default group name, as in "Main"
{$SiteGroup} - default group name for e.g. RecentChanges, as in "Site"
{$Name} - page name, as in "MarkupVariables"
{$Namespaced} - spaced page name, as in "Markup Variables"
{$DefaultName} - name of default page, as in "HomePage"
{$FullName} - page's full name, as in "PmWiki.MarkupVariables"
{$Title} - page title (may differ from Name), as in "MarkupVariables"
{$Titlespaced} - title/spaced page name, as in "Markup Variables"
{$UrlPage} - requested URL (valid only on the PageNotFound page)
{$LastModified} - date page was edited, as in "01.09.2005 05:18 Uhr"
{$LastModifiedBy} - page's last editor, as in "Pm"
{$LastModifiedHost} - IP of page's last editor, as in "24.1.26.255"
{$Author} - the name of the person currently interacting with the site, as in ""
{$AuthId} - current authenticated id, as in ""
{$Version} - PmWiki version, as in "pmwiki-2.1.beta10"
administrators (intermediate) Defining additional markup variablesYou can define additional markup variables by adding something like the
following to your configuration script (e.g. Markup('{$local-variables}', '>{$fmt}', '/{\\$(Var1|Var2|Var3)}/e', "\$GLOBALS['$1']"); $GLOBALS['Var1'] = "Variable 1"; $GLOBALS['Var2'] = "Variable 2"; $GLOBALS['Var3'] = "Variable 3"; This method of adding the markup variables will also make them known to the
function Markup('{$Var1}', '>{$fmt}', '/\\{\\$Var1\\}/', 'Variable 1'); Markup('{$Var2}', '>{$fmt}', '/\\{\\$Var2\\}/', 'Variable 2'); Markup('{$Var3}', '>{$fmt}', '/\\{\\$Var3\\}/', 'Variable 3'); Example 1Let's say you want Markup('{$local-variables}', '>{$fmt}', '/{\\$(Var1|Var2|mygroup)}/e', "\$GLOBALS['$1']"); $GLOBALS['Var1'] = "Variable 1"; $GLOBALS['Var2'] = "Variable 2"; $GLOBALS['mygroup'] = lower(FmtPageName('$Group', $pagename)); Using the second approach, you need to add something like this to your configuration script: Markup('{$mygroup}', '>{$fmt}', '/\\{\\$mygroup\\}/', lower(FmtPageName('$Group', $pagename))); Markup('{$Var1}', '>{$fmt}', '/\\{\\$Var1\\}/', 'Variable 1'); Markup('{$Var2}', '>{$fmt}', '/\\{\\$Var2\\}/', 'Variable 2'); Example 2Here is an example of a situation where you can't really define a variable
as described earlier. Let's say you want each instance of Markup('{$tic-toc}', '>{$var}', '/\\{\\$tic-toc\\}/e', "array_sum(explode(' ',microtime()))"); LinksAlso see these pages:
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