X-Git-Url: http://git.vanrenterghem.biz/git.ikiwiki.info.git/blobdiff_plain/79e6dd9d9b2b51aad33e2af3ccb89f0e69343a36..8aff1348e6fe0e11eb4266d9be1203f50ba3dedd:/doc/plugins/write/tutorial.mdwn diff --git a/doc/plugins/write/tutorial.mdwn b/doc/plugins/write/tutorial.mdwn index 2fc1c3e3f..8c2e986b8 100644 --- a/doc/plugins/write/tutorial.mdwn +++ b/doc/plugins/write/tutorial.mdwn @@ -2,10 +2,10 @@ This tutorial will walk you through [[writing|write]] your first ikiwiki plugin. What should the plugin do? Let's make it calculate and output the Fibonachi -sequense. To output the next number in the sequence, all a user has to do +sequence. To output the next number in the sequence, all a user has to do is write this on a wiki page: - \[[fib ]] + [[fib ]] When the page is built, that'll be replaced by the next number in the sequence. @@ -39,12 +39,12 @@ register hooks that ikiwiki will call later. } This has hooked our plugin into the preprocess hook, which ikiwiki uses to -expand [[PreprocessorDirectives|preprocessordirectives]]. Notice that "fib" -has shown up again. It doesn't actually have to match the module name this -time, but it generally will. This "fib" is telling ikiwiki what kind of -PreprocessorDirective to handle, namely one that looks like this: +expand [[PreprocessorDirectives|ikiwiki/preprocessordirective]]. Notice +that "fib" has shown up again. It doesn't actually have to match the module +name this time, but it generally will. This "fib" is telling ikiwiki what +kind of PreprocessorDirective to handle, namely one that looks like this: - \[[fib ]] + [[fib ]] Notice the `\&preprocess`? This is how you pass a reference to a function, and the `preprocess` function is the one that ikiwiki will call to expand @@ -98,7 +98,7 @@ And let's change the `preprocess` sub to use it: Feel free to try it out with a simple page like this: - \[[fib ]], \[[fib ]], \[[fib ]], \[[fib ]], \[[fib ]] + [[fib ]], [[fib ]], [[fib ]], [[fib ]], [[fib ]] Looks like it works ok, doesn't it? That creates a page that lists: @@ -119,7 +119,7 @@ the sequence in some cases. Obviously, using a global `$last` veriable was a bad idea. It would work ok in a more regular cgi-based wiki, which only outputs one page per run. But since ikiwiki is a wiki *compiler*, things are a bit more -complicated. It't not very hard to fix, though, if we do want the seqense +complicated. It's not very hard to fix, though, if we do want the sequence to start from 1 in every page that uses it. my %last; @@ -186,4 +186,4 @@ either case, it will run forever. Here's one way to fix that: } As these security problems have demonstrated, even a simple input from the -user needs to be checked thuroughly before being used by an ikiwiki plugin. +user needs to be checked thoroughly before being used by an ikiwiki plugin.