So formbuilder has an annoying glitch, that setting the value of a
checkbox, even without force, will override the value currently on the
form. Thus the guards against changing checkbox values when a form has been
submitted.
But those guards also prevented the checkboxes for advanced items getting
the right value when going into advanced mode.
Note that if the user makes changes to advanced mode stuff and leaves
advanced mode, those changes are lost. That seems reasonable so I didn't
change it -- and it made this fix simple.
I understand the need to avoid chdir when running git_parse_changes
for receive now. At that point, the changes have not been pushed to
the srcdir's repo yet. When running the same code for preprevert,
chdir to the srcdir is ok, and necessary.
plovs reported a crash when templates were not installed properly,
with a non-useful error about the template object not being defined.
I've audited all uses of template_depends(), and template(), and it makes
sense for them to throw an error if the template cannot be found. All code
with a user-supplied template catches errors already, to handle template
parse failures.
It did not make sense for template_file to throw errors, as some code uses
it to probe if a template file is available.
The HTML::Tree changelog says:
[THINGS THAT MAY BREAK YOUR CODE OR TESTS]
...
* Attribute names are now validated in as_XML and invalid names will
cause an error.
and indeed the regression tests do get an error.
With a relative xrds-location, the openid perl client module will fail.
I haven't checked the specs to see if it needs to be absolute, but all
examples I've seen are absolute, so it seems a very good idea.
I also tried setting RPC::XML::ENCODING but that did not prevent the crash,
and it seems that blogspam.net doesn't like getting xml encoded in unicode,
since it mis-flagged comments as spammy that way that are normally allowed
through.
If I am not mistaking all source files in ikiwiki are encoded in Unicode UTF-8.
Adding `\usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}` enables LaTeX to deal with the encoding.
As a consequence some special characters like umlauts can be used in the source
code which is useful for foreign languages.
[[!teximg code="a = b \text{ für alle } b \neq 2"]]
But for example »≠« cannot be used in LaTeX right now. One has to use other TeX
systems like XeTeX or LuaTeX featuring native UTF-8 support or use additional
nonstandard packages like uniinput [1].
I used the package `inputenc` (`texdoc inputenc`) and not `inputenx` (`texdoc
inputenx`), because I have not used `inputenx` that much and using the option
`math` is not supported in Debian (and I guess other distributions too) since
`inpmath` is not included in CTAN.
[1] http://wiki.neo-layout.org/browser/latex/Standard-LaTeX
Signed-off-by: Paul Menzel <paulepanter@users.sourceforge.net>