clarifications. and indent one of joey's oneliner responses.
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@ -79,6 +79,14 @@ be very convenient.
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> Did you consider just including the global rst header text into an item
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> in the setup file? --[[Joey]]
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>
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>> Then `rst_header` would not be much different from the python script
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>> `rst_customize`. rst_header is as safe as other files (though disruptive
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>> as noted), so it should/could be a editable file in the Wiki. A Python
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>> script of course can not be. There is nothing you can do in the
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>> rst_header (that you sensibly would do, I think) that couldn't be done in
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>> the Python script. `rst_header` has very limited use, but it is another
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>> possibility, mainly for the user-editable aspect. --[[ulrik]]
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Some rst-custom [examples are here](http://kaizer.se/wiki/rst_examples/)
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@ -148,6 +156,15 @@ picture before it.
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>>> the time, but ikiwiki's [[ikiwiki/subpage/linkingrules]]
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>>> are sufficiently different from normal html relative link
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>>> rules that it often won't work. --[[Joey]]
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>>>
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>>>> With degradation I mean that if you take a file out of the wiki; the
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>>>> links degrade to stylized text. If using default role, they degrade to
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>>>> :title: which renders italicized text (which I find is exactly
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>>>> appropriate). There is no way for them to degrade into links, except of
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>>>> course if you reimplement the :wiki: role. You can also respecify
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>>>> either the default role (the `wikilink` syntax) or the :wiki: role (the
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>>>> :wiki:`wikilink` syntax) to any other markup, for example None.
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>>>> --[[ulrik]]
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>>
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>> The named link syntax (just like the :wiki: role) are inspired from trac
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>> and a good fit, but only if the wiki is committed to using only rst,
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@ -226,7 +243,7 @@ Perl I've ever written!_)
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>> Well, no idea how that would be expressed, but I mean, replace the indent
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>> directly in $handle's return value.
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>>
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>> Yes, in effect just `indent($1, handle->($2,$,4))` --[[Joey]]
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>>> Yes, in effect just `indent($1, handle->($2,$,4))` --[[Joey]]
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>>
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>> The indent-catching regex is wrong in the way you mention, it has been
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>> nagigng my mind a bit as well; I think matching start of line + spaces
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