On Aug 12, 2009, at 10:02 AM, hel-o wrote:
Wow great, so you can creat a div when you use ((( )))
Wouldnt it be better to call it Embedded Blocks since divs are block
elements?
We already use the Block terminology (everything is a block). The fact
that an element is standalone or inline is not suggested in its name.
For example Horizontal Lines are called Horizontal Line event though
it's a standalone block.
Groups you already use for User Groups
Sure but it's a completely different context. We're inside syntax here.
However the most important reason we cannot change it is that it would
require too much refactoring work now.
I've fixed the syntax page on
http://platform.xwiki.org/xwiki/bin/view/Main/XWikiSyntax
(there's just a little pb with the TOC which will disappear I think
when we convert the page to 2.0 syntax).
Thanks
-Vincent
hel.
vmassol wrote:
>
>
> On Aug 11, 2009, at 8:19 PM, hel-o wrote:
>
>>
>> Ok, should have seen this. :blush:
>>
>> But still, why do you call it embedded documents. Don't now but it
>> looks to
>> me that this is used to include more complex syntax in tables (and
>> it's
>> great that thats possible!).
>
> That's the old name. If it's still there it needs to be changed. It's
> now called groups.
>
> -Vincent
>
>> In XWiki the term document is somtimes used for documents like word
>> documents or xar or anything you import or export to. Sometimes for
>> wiki
>> pages which are sometimes also only pages and now for pieces of
>> documents
>> that are included in documents or pages or ....
>>
>> I find that sometimes confusing =^D
>>
>> hel.
>>
>>
>>
>> tmortagne wrote:
>>>
>>> On Tue, Aug 11, 2009 at 14:03, hel-o<hel(a)hel.at> wrote:
>>>
>>> When i look at
>>>
http://platform.xwiki.org/xwiki/bin/view/Main/XWikiSyntax#HEmbeddeddocuments
>>> i see an explanation of what is embedded document and an example
>>> of a
>>> document content containing a header and a list inserted in a table
>>> cell thanks to embedded document ((( ))) syntax. Is it the page you
>>> looked when you say "Syntax Help" ?
>>>
>>> --
>>> Thomas Mortagne